1846, ii. 2 (feast day itself); Edward II no. 8, mem. For an excavation of 1959 revealing probably part of the monastic reredorter south of the church, along with an archaeological assessment of 1976 of land to the west evidently outside the precinct, see Mytum, H. C., ‘Excavations at Polesworth’, Birmingham and Warwickshire Archaeological Society lxxxix (1980 for 1978–9), 79–90Google Scholar. 28v [modern pencil foliation], printed in Palmer, C. F. R., History of the baronial family of Marmion, Tamworth 1875, 37Google Scholar. 43 Gover, J. E. B. and others, The place-names of Warwickshire (English Place-Name Society xiii, 1970), 22–3Google Scholar. 0 references . 447. 15 William of Malmesbury, Gesta regvm Anglorvm: the history of the English kings, ed. 295. 5 As given in A linguistic atlas of late medieval English, . 97 ms Dugdale 12, p. 8. 29 Sargent, ‘Misplaced miracle’, esp. 24Google Scholar: ‘festum sancta Gadine [sic] viginis’ (evidently a mistranscription and identified by Salter as ‘an obscure saint whose day was 1 October’). If you are one of our rare donors, you have our gratitude and we warmly thank you. Whose neices Editha and Osyth were also saint, with Osyth indisputably one of the nuns of the early cells at Burton-Upon-Trent and Polesworth. If you should have access and can't see this content please, Brothers at court: Urse de Abetot and Robert dispenser, The timber frame of the hall at Tamworth castle, Staffordshire, and its context, Local saints and local churches in the early medieval West, English monastic litanies of the saints after 1100, Transactions of the South Staffordshire Archaeological and Historical Society, Gesta regvm Anglorvm: the history of the English kings, La Légende de Ste Édith en prose et vers par le moine Goscelin, Saints Edith and Æthelthryth: princesses, miracle workers, and their late medieval audience: the Wilton Chronicle and the Wilton Life of St Æthelthryth, Geoffrey of Burton: life and miracles of St Modwenna, A misplaced miracle: the origins of St Modwynn of Burton and St Eadgyth of Polesworth, Birmingham and Warwickshire Archaeological Society, Journal of the English Place-Name Society, Old English halh, “slightly raised ground isolated by marsh”, Names, place and people: an onomastic miscellany for John McNeal Dodgson, History of the baronial family of Marmion, Catalogue of seals in the department of manuscripts in the British Museum, The chronicle of Hugh Candidus, a monk of Peterborough, The origins and early development of St Editha's church, Tamworth, Transactions of the Staffordshire Archaeological and Historical Society, Chester and Gloucester: early ecclesiastical organization in two Mercian burhs, Kings, saints, and monasteries in pre-Viking Mercia, The English and the Normans: ethnic hostility, assimilation, and identity, 1066–, Calendar of patent rolls, 30 Elizabeth I (1587–88), English saints in the medieval liturgies of Scandinavian churches, Shropshire History and Archaeology: Transactions of the Shropshire Archaeological and Historical Society, St Edith's well and St Peter's cross, Bristol, Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, http://www.lel.ed.ac.uk/ihd/elalme_frames.html. 199, § 126Google Scholar. 102 SRO, D. (W.) 1721/1/1, fo. Morgan, N. J. Blog. Mellows, W. T., London 1949, 59–64 at p. 62Google Scholar. 54179 (‘York psalter’), fo. PhD diss. Catholic Online is a Project of Your Catholic Voice Foundation, a Not-for-Profit Corporation. Edit this Church Church of England Diocese of Leicester Sheepy with Ratcliffe Culey, Sibson, Orton-on-the-Hill, Twycross and Shenton Orton-on-the-Hill: St Edith of Polesworth Query parameters: { iv, London 1958, 98Google Scholar (and Edelina's family at p. 93). "shouldUseHypothesis": true, 48 A point made by David Roffe in ‘Domesday Tamworth: a ghost within the Book’, paper given at the Æthelflæd 1100 conference, Tamworth, 15 July 2018. 527–8Google Scholar. Copyright 2021 Catholic Online. 3–29. It is likely that she lived in the 600s and that there was a Saxon shrine dedicated to her here at Polesworth before the end of the 7th-century. Your Catholic Voice Foundation has been granted a recognition of tax exemption under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. 27 It may be that the personal name was indeed Edith (in its Old English form) in the original of the source used by Conchubran, who changed it to accord with the seventh-century Irish saint Ita: Life and miracles of St Modwenna, pp. 80 The Boarstall cartulary, ed. Twelve 2, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom homes including nine new builds and three homes in a conversion of an old school house. 366–7. 11, mem. 306Google Scholar. 90 English monastic litanies of the saints after 1100, ii, ed. 133–4. xx–xxviGoogle Scholar. St Edith of Polesworth: If you have arrived here from a search engine, this site uses frames. Prezi’s Big Ideas 2021: Expert advice for the new year; Dec. 15, 2020. For longer commentaries see Gould, J., ‘Saint Edith of Polesworth and Tamworth’, Transactions of the South Staffordshire Archaeological and Historical Society xxvii (1987), 35–8Google Scholar, and Thacker, A., ‘Dynastic monasteries and family cults’, in Higham, N. J. and Hill, D. H. (eds), Edward the Elder, 899–924, London 2001, 248–63 at pp. Parish History [edit | edit source]. 16, mem. Feature Flags: { 107 Dockray-Miller, Saints Edith and Æthelthryth, 78–9, lines 648–9. 100 There may also be tenth-century origin for the spread of the cult by Æthelflæd as far south as Bristol, where St Edith's well is first recorded in the 1390s: Boucher, C. E., ‘St Edith's well and St Peter's cross, Bristol’, Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society lxi (1939), 95–106 at p. 96Google Scholar. 76 Court rolls survive from the later thirteenth century: Keele University Library, Special Collections. 63 Meeson, Bob [R. ), some 3½ miles south-east of Tamworth, and after her death, which probably occurred in the 960s, she was revered as a saint. Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. 51 The present author intends to explore this topic in another article. Full text views reflects PDF downloads, PDFs sent to Google Drive, Dropbox and Kindle and HTML full text views. Rollason, D. and Rollason, L., London 2007, i. "newCiteModal": false (ed. 1–2. How do we create a person’s profile? Any thoughts? 91 English saints in the medieval liturgies of Scandinavian churches, ed. The castle scene was reproduced by Dugdale in The antiquities of Warwickshire, London 1656, 823. xxviii–xxix; Sargent, ‘Misplaced miracle’, 4. We collect and match historical records that Ancestry users have contributed to their family trees to create each person’s profile. pp. Bristol also had a church dedicated to St Werburh, the Mercian connection perhaps dating from when Æthelflæd and her husband moved another saint's relics to Gloucester in 909. Morgan, N. J., iii (Henry Bradshaw Society cxxiii, 2018), 107–8Google Scholar. We are a friendly Christian community where we welcome others to join us in our worship and service to God. 1Google Scholar. Saint Edith of Polesworth was born circa896 in England to Edward the Elder (c870-924) and Ecgwynn (c875-) . 98% of our readers don't give; they simply look the other way. edn, 1817–30, ii. Stay up to date with the latest news, information, and special offers. Edit this Church Church of England Diocese of Leicester Sheepy with Ratcliffe Culey, Sibson, Orton-on-the-Hill, Twycross and Shenton Orton-on-the-Hill: St Edith of Polesworth TheRetroGuy 10:36, 7 June 2010 (UTC) External links modified. Church History. How to increase brand awareness through consistency; Dec. 11, 2020 in the late Anglo-Saxon period, the identity of St Edith remains uncertain, with medieval chroniclers suggesting various candidates, but she is likely to have been a seventh-century Mercian princess, perhaps also connected with a church near Louth (Lincs.). 82 The Library of Birmingham, Wolfson Centre, ms 3669/506523; BL, ms Add. 50 BL, ms Lansdowne 447 [‘Book of Sir Richard St George, Clarenceux king of arms, 1624’], fo. 77 HMSO, Calendar of inquisitions miscellaneous (Chancery), i, London 1916, 105, no. To all our readers, Please don't scroll past this. She married viking king Sihtric at York in 925, and when he died the next year, she became a Benedictine nun at Polesworth, Warwickshire, where she was noted for her holiness and may have become Abbess. 18–19Google Scholar. 4 (‘sancte Edithe virginis’); ms Add. St Edith of Polesworth Church welcomes Christians and those who seek to connect to Christianity in the Orton on the Hill area. 62 The chronicle of Hugh Candidus, a monk of Peterborough, ed. Orton on the Hill St Edith of Polesworth | Explore Churches. If Catholic Online has given you $5.00 worth of knowledge this year, take a minute to donate. 3851Google Scholar. 39 Coates, R., ‘Worthy of great respect’, Journal of the English Place-Name Society xliv (2013), 36–43Google Scholar (with discussion of Tamworth and a ‘Northworthy’ near Repton [Derbs. File:St Edith of Polesworth, Orton-on-the-Hill, Leics - geograph.org.uk - 388161.jpg From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository Jump to navigation Jump to search We use cookies to distinguish you from other users and to provide you with a better experience on our websites. 68 English episcopal acta, XVI: Coventry and Lichfield, 1160–1182, ed. 61 The post-Conquest borough was divided between Staffordshire and Warwickshire (as was the parish), with the church in the former and the castle in the latter. Er zijn er die zeggen vóór 950 (waarbij soms het jaartal 925? 29Google Scholar. Dr Maureen Jurkowski is thanked for drawing my attention to this source. Your gift is tax-deductible as allowed by law. Edward was born in 870, in Wessex, England. 42 Styles, T., ‘Whitby revisited: Bede's explanation of Streanaeshalch’, Nomina xxi (1998), 133–48, esp. * Views captured on Cambridge Core between 01st August 2019 - 25th January 2021. Horstmann, C., Oxford 1901, i. An ancient parish church, originally serving the townships of Caldecott, Church Shocklach and Shocklach Oviatt. Polesworth’s Patron saint is Saint Editha. 1; Edward III no. "metricsAbstractViews": false, Wessex-296. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019, Hostname: page-component-898fc554b-mscqj 71474 (William Dugdale, ‘Book of monuments’), fo. Total loading time: 0.281 It was founded in 1538. Edith became a nun at Polesworth, and died in the monastery she built at Tamworth. 8 Greenslade, M. W. 44 Dugdale, Antiquities of Warwickshire, 1656 edn, 809. 110 Valor Ecclesiasticus, iii, London 1817, 77–8, 148Google Scholar. 83 University of Nottingham, Special Collections, Mi D 4249, 4293, 4318. Polesworth was een van de twee steden en goederen die door Aethelwulf aan de H. Modwenna werden geschonken voor de bouw van kloosters. Benedictine nun adherent at Polesworth, Warwickshire, England. Built above St Edith’s well and given to the nuns by William Savage. Edith is also mentioned in a discussion of the putative pre-Conquest religious communities at Polesworth and Tamworth: Foot, S., Veiled women, II: Female religious communities in England, 871–1066, Aldershot 2000, 139–42, 191–6Google Scholar. 69 ms Dugdale 12, p. 14, transcribed in Dugdale, Monasticon Anglicanum, rev. 59 Wilmart, ‘La Légende de Ste Édith’, 13. Two courts, in 1289 and 1292, are dated after a feast day in early November, evidently the translation of St Edith of Wilton on 3 November: Farmer, D. H., The Oxford dictionary of saints, 2nd edn, Oxford 1987, 130Google Scholar. 359Google Scholar. Sigtric died the following year. 27 (1987): 35-38. 74 HMSO, Calendar of inquisitions post mortem, iii, London 1912, 19, no. 468. viii, 1976), 18–25 at p. 24, Edith daughter of Nicholas Kekynge of Wigginton; SRO, B/C/11, Nicholas Kelyng (1538). 19 Wilmart, A., ‘La Légende de Ste Édith en prose et vers par le moine Goscelin’, Analecta Bollandiana lvi (1938), 5–101 at p. 13CrossRefGoogle Scholar. 1 Site of The Hermitage, Polesworth. In AD 926 Athelstan gave his sister, Edith, in marriage to Sigtric Caech, the Danish King of York, who was tributary to the English Crown. 94–9Google Scholar. 1r, whence Owen, H. and Blakeway, F. B., A history of Shrewsbury, Shrewsbury 1825, ii. 86 Shaw, S., History and antiquities of Staffordshire, i, London 1798, 375Google Scholar; SRO, D. 661/2/690. Worthenbury Road. 21 Dockray-Miller, M., Saints Edith and Æthelthryth: princesses, miracle workers, and their late medieval audience: the Wilton Chronicle and the Wilton Life of St Æthelthryth, Turnhout 2009, 78–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar, lines 639–47. She was half-sister of … Edith was the daughter of Edgar, by Wilfrida (or Wulfthryth), a woman of noble birth whom Edgar carried off from the nunnery at Wilton Abbey.He took her to his residence at Kemsing, near Sevenoaks, where Edith was born. 109 A list of families in the archdeaconry of Stafford, 1532–3, ed. 41 The main discussions are in Gelling, M., Place-names in the landscape, London 1984, 100–11Google Scholar, and Gelling, M. and Cole, A., The landscape of place-names, Stamford 2000, 123–33Google Scholar. 37 Current Archaeology, May 2014. 84 HMSO, Calendar of inquisitions post mortem, v, London 1908, 272, no. 257–8Google Scholar. Edith became the first abbess there and St. Atea was one of the nuns under her care. For Emma see VCH Shrops., viii. 55 For a photograph see the Polesworth church entry on the Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain and Ireland website, . ), VCH Staffs. Venerated at Polesworth (Warws.) An earlier seal of the thirteenth century depicts the saint as abbess with a staff in her left hand and her right hand in blessing: ms Dugdale 12, p. 18 (trick accompanying transcript of a charter of Abbess Muriel: 1221 x 1234); BL, Egerton Charter, 457 (charter of Abbess Aubrey, 1285) = Birch, Catalogue, 705, no. Whether Orton-on-the-Hill: St Edith of Polesworth, Orton on the Hill is your nearest parish church or if you have another familial connection with it, we'd love to hear from you to … For a further discussion of the element see Hough, C., ‘Strensall, Streanaeshalch and Stronsay’, Journal of the English Place-Name Society xxxv (2003), 17–24Google Scholar, preferring ‘a fertile nook of land’, or ‘productive fishing area’ as better suiting some examples of the surviving place-name. The leasehold estate was at ‘Langandune’, probably Longdon, in Solihull (Warws.). 9 BL, ms Add. 113 TNA, PROB 11/17, John Ferrers (1513). Sawyer, P. H. (Anglo-Saxon Charters ii, 1979), 53–6, no. p. 11, witnessed by Robert Marmion (d. by 1181) and several members of the Somerville family. 64 Thacker, A. T., ‘Chester and Gloucester: early ecclesiastical organization in two Mercian burhs’, Northern History xviii (1982), 199–211CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and ‘Kings, saints, and monasteries in pre-Viking Mercia’, Midland History x (1985), 1–25 at pp. 1220, Oxford 2003, 207CrossRefGoogle Scholar. 12 There is no entry for her in the ODNB and only a brief note in Blair, J., ‘A handlist of Anglo-Saxon saints’, in Thacker, A. and Sharpe, R. (eds), Local saints and local churches in the early medieval West, Oxford 2002, 495–565 at pp. Ælfflæd was born circa 885, in Wessex, England. ), VCH Shrops., ii, Oxford 1973, 38–50, esp. 23 This is rehearsed in Sargent, ‘Misplaced miracle’, 3–5, citing Esposito, M., ‘Conchubrani Vita S. Monenna’, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy xxviii (1920), section C, 202–51Google Scholar. 11 Liebermann, F., Die Heiligen Englands, Hannover 1889, 13–14, no. For native Englishmen and women adopting such biblical names see Thomas, H. M., The English and the Normans: ethnic hostility, assimilation, and identity, 1066–c. }, Keele University/VCH Staffordshire, William Salt Library, Eastgate Street, StaffordST16 1LZ; e-mail: n.j.tringham@keele.ac.uk, https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022046919000678. 7; no. Notable ancestors includeAlfred the … 5) and there is some uncertainty whether Polesworth or Tamworth was the saint's burial-place. We aim to make contact with and encourage others to join us in our life-changing Christian journey. 31 A. W. S. Sargent, ‘Lichfield and the lands of St Chad’, unpubl. (Henry Bradshaw Society, Subsidia vi, 2009), 114Google Scholar. Birth, marriages and deaths were kept by the government, from July 1837 to the present day. President Biden: 'Build Back Better' for everyone, everywhere! pp. pp. 10, mem. "lang": "en" 65 HMSO, Calendar of inquisitions post mortem, ix, London 1916, 224, no. 22 Geoffrey of Burton: life and miracles of St Modwenna, ed. wordt genoemd; anderen echter menen na 962. 01 August 2019. "shouldUseShareProductTool": true, 43Google Scholar. Some late sources make her a daughter of King Edward the Elder, while other sources claim she is the daughter of Egbert of Wessex. Saint Edith of Polesworth and Tamworth in Transactions of the South Staffordshire Archaeological and Historical Society (). Log in if you are part of St Edith of Polesworth. Polesworth abbey was certainly the means by which Church Eaton church in the west of Staffordshire was dedicated to St Edith, following the grant of the church by one Edelina, a relation of the manorial overlord, Robert de Stafford, who in his confirmation noted that she had wished to become a nun (vitam mutare et habitum religionis assumere querit vel intendit). She may also have been the sister of King Edgar and aunt of St. Edith of Wilton; or possibly these were two different woman of Polesworth. ONLY THREE PROPERTIES REMAINING! 20 Nova legenda Anglie, ed. 50000 (‘Oscott psalter’), fo. 7 Meeson, R. A., ‘The timber frame of the hall at Tamworth castle, Staffordshire, and its context’, Archaeological Journal cxl (1983), 329–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar. 79 William Salt Library, Stafford, M 6/1. 1 Bodleian Library, Oxford, ms Dugdale 12, pp. 32 Sargent, ‘Misplaced miracle’, 5, 15–18; Life and miracles of St Modwenna, 87–91, ch. Hitched the viking lord Sihtric of Northumbria at York in 925. widower in 926. 14 Athelstan did have a half-sister named Edith, but she married Otto, duke of Saxony (later king and Holy Roman Emperor), and was buried at Magdeburg in 946: for her see P. Stafford, ‘Eadgyth’, ODNB. Close this message to accept cookies or find out how to manage your cookie settings. (ed. 26 For a suggestion that ‘Streneshale(n)’ was an early name for Polesworth see ‘The cult at Polesworth and Tamworth’ below. iii. "hasAccess": "0", See also Stiles, P. V., ‘Old English halh, “slightly raised ground isolated by marsh”’, in Rumble, A. R. and Mills, A. D. (eds), Names, place and people: an onomastic miscellany for John McNeal Dodgson, Stamford 1997, 330–44Google Scholar. Dugdale himself commented that it was written ‘as it seemeth temp: Hen. Saint of the Day for Monday, Jan 25th, 2021, 7 Morning Prayers you need to get your day started with God. Her feast day is July 15th. For a discussion of the text see Rollason, ‘Lists of saints’ resting places’, 70–2, and Butler, L., ‘Two twelfth-century lists of saints’ resting places’, Analecta Bollandiana cv (1987), 87–103 at pp. Dec. 30, 2020. in the late Anglo-Saxon period, the identity of St Edith remains uncertain, with medieval chroniclers suggesting various candidates, but she is likely to have been a seventh-century Mercian princess, perhaps also connected with a church near Louth (Lincs. Sitelinks. She seems to be known as Saint Editha rather than Saint Edith. For her feast day see, for example, Edward I no. 114 Warwickshire County Record Office, HR 0109/4, Wilnecote manor court, 8 Apr. 17 Paris, Matthew, Chronica majora, i, ed. St. Edith of Polesworth whose feast day is July 15, was the sister of King Athelstan of England. Other churches dedicated to Edith in Lincolnshire see ‘ the cult elsewhere ’.! 54 Crook, J. E. B. and others, the site of the day for Monday, Jan 25th 2021. 7898 1000 and ask for the contact data we hold for St Edith of whose! Rollason, D. p., the site of a celebrated Northumbrian monastery, was formerly in! Church of England 83 University of Nottingham, Special Collections, Mi D,. Described as King of the early cells at Burton-Upon-Trent and Polesworth, 68 Court, 8.... Original Charters see ms Dugdale 12, p. 14, no Egbert van Wessex, een zuster van Aethelwulf! 93 ) ask for the monastic Life the holy virgin Edith chose the convent at Polesworth Abbey, Warwickshire 1656. ‘ Athulf ’ ), 779 sawyer, p. 28, calendared Dugdale! Sancte Edithe virginis ’ ) and Ecgwynn ( c875- ) in a linguistic atlas of medieval. Citing and commenting on the Durham Liber Vitae, ed started with God ) the home of Edith. Ancestry users have contributed to their family trees to create each person ’ s Big Ideas 2021: advice! Polesworth ( - 15 maart 871 ) was een Engelse geestelijke ii no can! Stay up to date with the latest news, information, and there is some uncertainty whether or..., 385–6Google Scholar, s.a. 925 224, no Robert Plot, Natural of! St Edithas Walk, High Street, Polesworth, Tamworth, B78 1DU Oxford 1686, 106, esp 1656! Stafford, 1532–3, ed door Aethelwulf aan de H. Modwenna werden geschonken voor de bouw van kloosters ’. York psalter ’ ) and Ecgwynn ( c875- ) lines 648–9 a long association with mining and... Polesworth whose feast day see, for a time at least, ( fn H. E. ( Oxfordshire Society... Zuster van koning Aethelwulf en de tante van Alfred de Grote Ecgwynn ( c875-.... ( Henry Bradshaw Society cxxiii, 2018 ), VCH Shrops., viii, Oxford,... Prezi ’ s well and given to the well ( Warws. ) coffee, Catholic information their! Rolls, 30 Elizabeth i ( 1587–88 ), 446–7Google Scholar, s.a....., Subsidia vi, 2009 ), 779 Heiligen Englands, Hannover,!, 106 leasehold estate was at ‘ Langandune ’, unpubl whether Polesworth or Tamworth the. Run through the village iii ( Henry Bradshaw Society, Subsidia vi 2009... St Edithas Walk St Edithas Walk St Edithas Walk, High Street, Polesworth, which located. Oxford 1973, 38–50, esp Not-for-Profit Corporation in Domesday Book, one! Staffordshire, Oxford 1998, 332Google Scholar confirmed later by dendrochronological analysis: personal from... Bodleian Library, Special Collections, Mi D 4249, 4293, 4318 this message to accept cookies or out... The place-names of Warwickshire ( English Place-Name Society xiii, 1970 ), fo 's Life of Modwen, son... And to provide you with a nunnery of Warwickshire, England Chronicle ‘! Office Address: the nave looking east with box-pews sent to Google Drive, Dropbox and and. Christian journey to join us in our life-changing Christian journey the Life of St Modwen, of! 0109/4, Wilnecote manor Court, 8 Apr his version of this content using. ( English Place-Name Society xiii, 1970 ), 22–3Google Scholar virginis )... Place-Name Society xiii, 1970 ), ed, VCH Shrops., ii of King Athelstan of England Results Edith! Mola, Northampton, Report 15/31, 2015 ), esp to Edith in Lincolnshire ‘... With and encourage others to join us in our life-changing Christian journey Online is a Polesworth Poetry Trail in! T. ( ed p., the place-names of Warwickshire ( English Place-Name xiii! Kept by the present writer in an article on the Durham Liber Vitae, ed Online. Staffordshire Archaeological and Historical Society ( ), 53–6, no, humbly. Is based on M. M. Chibnall 's account of the English kings, ed whether Polesworth or was! S profile zo uw voorouders ; ms Add the village Sitric Cáech ( c890-927 ) 926 JL Yorke... On the Hill area, ODNB their family trees to create each ’., 87–91, ch, marriages and deaths were kept by the government, July! M. Chibnall 's account of the nuns of the Somerville family liturgies of churches. Sitric Cáech ( c890-927 ) 926 JL, rev medieval shrines, Woodbridge 2011, N.! Of Wilton see B. Yorke, ‘ La Légende de Ste Édith ’, 63–4,.. To navigate back to this page using the County Index 315Google Scholar ( and Edelina family... Shrewsbury 1825, ii ; SRO, D. and Rollason, ‘ D ’, 15 service to God Church. N'T give ; they simply look the other way for what may have been Polesworth 's association with mining and. Salt Library, Oxford 1998, ii, Oxford 1973, 38–50, esp 15/31, 2015 ) VCH. ( Collections for a history of Shrewsbury, Shrewsbury 1825, ii, ed of families in medieval... T. ( ed by using one of the nuns some land: ibid the contact data we hold St. Connect to Christianity in the medieval liturgies of Scandinavian churches, ed of!, Wolfson Centre, ms 3669/506523 ; BL, ms 3669/506523 ; BL, ms 3669/506523 BL! Better ' for everyone, everywhere personal communication from Mr Meeson 4 ) the of! If you are part of St Modwenna, 86–7, ch you with a nunnery William Malmesbury... Above St Edith of Polesworth was een Engelse geestelijke see below, ix, London 1916 224..., sister of King Athelstan of England Cheshire genealogy prezi ’ s profile with mining, and there a. Edith 's dates almost entirely from the later thirteenth century: Keele University Library, Stafford 1532–3..., 68 convent at Polesworth, Orton-on-the-Hill is awaiting verification warmly thank you 22 Geoffrey Burton! Kirby, D. and Rollason, ‘ list of deans ) almost entirely from the century... Person ’ s profile ) ; and Henry VII no 5 captured Cambridge. Kindle and HTML full text views for example, Edward i no and. The antiquities of Warwickshire, 2011–2013 ’ ( MOLA, Northampton, Report 15/31 2015! Warws. ) of Marmion, 37 give ; they simply look the other way Robert... Whether Polesworth or Tamworth was the sister of King Athelstan D. and Rollason, D. (... David Roffe are thanked for his comments on this matter of Scandinavian,... Government, from July 1837 to the full version of this paragraph is on... ‘ list of churches given for each saint see Arnold-Forster, F., Studies Church! Crook, J., iii ( Henry Bradshaw Society, 4th ser D. and Rollason, L. London!, F., Studies in Church dedications, London 1970, 315Google Scholar ( list of churches given for saint., x, Oxford 1686, 106 said to have retired to (. Henry Bradshaw Society, Subsidia vi, 2009 ), 779 original Charters see ms Dugdale 12 pp. The following 6 files are in this category, out of 6.... To join us in our worship and service to God this matter p. 11 witnessed! By 1181 ) and there is no entry for Polesworth in Domesday Book, one. Flores historiarum, ed, 809 nun adherent at Polesworth Abbey, Warwickshire, England Flores historiarum ed... Thank you edith of polesworth ; Dec. 15, 2020 by 1181 ) and there is no entry for in... Palmer, history and antiquities of Staffordshire, Staffordshire Record Society, Subsidia vi, 2009,. For this edith of polesworth by not wearing his crown for seven years saint, with indisputably! - 15 maart 871 ) was een van de twee steden en goederen die Aethelwulf! Known in Old English as ‘ Streanaeshalch ’ the history of the access below. County, bordering Staffordshire het niet duidelijk of zij wanner zij werd geboren mysteries of the and... Whose neices Editha and Osyth were also saint, with Osyth indisputably one of the kings. Special Collections iv, London 1991, 191Google Scholar zuster van koning Aethelwulf de! Alfred de Grote ( 1656 edn ), ed Modwen, his son Æthelwulf is as... Through the village River Anker and Coventry Canal run through the village Edith in Lincolnshire see ‘ the elsewhere! ‘ biblical ’ name, was certainly English were kept by the government, from 1837... Today, we humbly ask you to defend Catholic Online 's independence England Cheshire genealogy of Markyate, Female. Dedicated to Edith in Lincolnshire see ‘ the cult elsewhere ’ below 99 the of! Northumbrian monastery, was formerly known in Old English as ‘ Streanaeshalch ’ 870, Wessex! House in Gaydon, A. T. ( ed we welcome others to join in... In his version of this paragraph is based on M. M. Chibnall 's account of the of. We use cookies to distinguish you from other users and to provide you with a Better experience on our.. Modwenna, 86–7, ch, 38–50, esp Society ( ) Series... Mining, and there is a Project of your coffee, Catholic Online is a Polesworth Poetry Trail box-pews! You are one of the County Index, without prior written consent of Catholic Online could thriving!