Saint Wihtburh | |
|---|---|
St. Wihtburh, depicted in St Nicholas's Church,Dereham, Norfolk | |
| Died | 17 March 743 Dereham |
| Venerated in | |
| Majorshrine | Ely Cathedral St Etheldreda's Church, London |
| Feast | 8 July (translation of relics), March 17 (repose) |
| Attributes | A pair ofdoes; church |
Catholic cult suppressed | 1540s[1] |
Wihtburh (alsoWithburga orWithburge; died 743) was anEast Anglian saint andabbess. She was renowned for founding and governing a convent atDereham inNorfolk. The Dereham convent no longer exists except for St Nicholas Church.
According to folk tradition, Wihtburh was the youngest daughter of KingAnna,king of the East Angles, but academics such asVirginia Blanton andBarbara Yorke have suggested that this is unlikely.
Withburh is traditionally linked to an account in which twodoes provided milk for Wihtburh's builders for herconvent atDereham, inNorfolk. When a local official attempted to hunt down the does, he was thrown from his horse and killed.
Withburh died in 743 and was buried at Dereham. Her body was said to beuncorrupted by age or decay when her tomb was opened half a century after her death, and the church and the tomb subsequently became a place of pilgrimage. Whenher relics were stolen on the orders of the abbot ofEly Abbey, the remains were re-interred at Ely next to her sistersÆthelthryth andSeaxburh. In 1106, Withburh's body was again examined and found to be intact.
Wihtburh's cult in Eastern England, which was never large, was closely linked with that of Æthelthryth, her supposed sister. As Æthelthryth is known to have been a daughter of KingAnna of East Anglia, Wihtburh would have been her sister, if it is true that Wihtburh was a daughter of King Anna. Her veneration was suppressed during theReformation in the 1540s, and her relics were all destroyed.
Wihtburh was supposedly one of the daughters ofAnna of East Anglia,[2] a son of Eni, a member of theWuffingas dynasty, and a nephew ofRædwald, king of the East Angles from 600 to 625.[3]East Anglia was an early and long-livedAnglo-Saxon kingdom that corresponds with the modern English counties of Norfolk and Suffolk.[4] Due to their rivalry for control over theMiddle Anglian people, East Anglia and its neighbourMercia probably became hereditary enemies, and Mercia's kingPenda repeatedly attacked the East Angles from the mid-630s to 654.[5]
The sources for information about Wihtburh's family and the life and reign of Anna include theHistoria ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum (Ecclesiastical History of the English People), completed inNorthumbria by the English monkBede in 731, and theAnglo-Saxon Chronicle, which dates the from 9th century. TheLiber Eliensis, written atEly in the 12th century, also provides information about Anna and his daughters.[6]
Wihtburh is not mentioned by Bede, whose writings about her elder sistersSeaxburh of Ely,Æthelthryth,Æthelburh of Faremoutiers andSæthryth, her older half-sister, indicate that he was well-informed about the family.[7][8] References to Wihtburh first appear in 10th and 11th century records, and themedievalistVirginia Blanton has suggested that the connection between Wihtburh and the family of Anna is likely to be a fabrication, invented to enhance the status of Ely Abbey.[2]
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After the death of her father inc. 653, Wihtburh built aconvent inDereham,Norfolk. In thehagiographical account of Æthelthryth's life in theLiber Eliensis, Wihtburh is said to have "voluntarily elected to live in solitude near Dereham".[9]
A traditional story relates that while she was building the convent, she had nothing but dry bread to give to the workmen. She prayed to theVirgin Mary and was told to send her maids to a local well each morning. There they found two wilddoes that were gentle enough to be milked, and so provided a nutritious drink for the workers. According to the story, a local official did not approve of the miracle, and decided to hunt down the does with his dogs and prevent them from coming to be milked. He was punished for this cruelty when he was thrown from his horse and broke his neck.[10][11][12]
The account is commemorated in thetown sign in the centre of Dereham.[13] The original sign, which was made in 1954 by Harry Carter and boys fromHamond's Grammar School, was replaced in 2004 by afibreglass replica.[14]
Wihtburh died at a great age in 743, and was buried at Dereham.[15] The historianBarbara Yorke has commented on this date for Wihtburh's death, stating that it is "rather late for a daughter of Anna".[7]
Wihtburh is mentioned in theAnglo-Saxon Chronicleannal for 799, in an addition to the original text that was written after theNorman Conquest of 1066:[8][16]
A.D. 799. This year Archbishop Ethelbert, and Cynbert, Bishop of Wessex, went to Rome. In the meantime Bishop Alfun died at Sudbury, and was buried at Dunwich. After him Tidfrith was elected to the see; and Siric, king of the East Saxons, went to Rome. In this year the body of Witburga was found entire, and free from decay, at Dercham, after a lapse of five and fifty years from the period of her decease.
— Anglo-Saxon Chronicle[17]
Theincorruptibility of Wihtburh's body was considered amiracle and her remains were re-interred in the church which she had built in Dereham. The church and the tomb became a place ofpilgrimage. The large church at Dereham has achapel dedicated to Wihtburh, and a plan that, according to the historian Tim Pestell, "is possibly indicative of its former status".[18][19]

In 974, Brithnoth, the abbot ofEly, accompanied bymonks and armed men, travelled to Dereham with the intention of taking Wihtburh's body by force. They organised a feast for the townspeople as a diversion tactic. After waiting until the Dereham men were properly drunk, Brithnoth stole Wihtburh's body and set off during the night for theIsle of Ely. After discovering the theft, the people of Dereham set off after the tomb-robbers, who were attacked atBrandon by the townspeople.[16] Using their knowledge ofthe Fens to evade their pursuers, Brithnoth and his men successfully reached Ely, and Wihtburh's remains were re-interred there.[20][note 1] When the Dereham men returned home, they discovered that a spring had arisen in Wihtburh's tomb.[18]
Saints'cults were a feature ofChristianity in Anglo-Saxon England, and their remains attracted benefactions. Smaller monasteries may not have been able to resist the requests of places like Ely to acquire their relics, which accounts for the theft of the remains of Wihtburh in 974.[18] The story of the theft, which appeared in theLiber Eliensis, was taken from an earlierLife of the saint. The abbey attempted to relate the story as an "appropriate holy sacrilege", which gave her honour, as she was being laid to rest close to the remains of her older sister, Æthelthryth.[16]

At the site of Wihtburh's tomb outside the west end of the town'sparish church, there is the remains of aholy well associated with the saint,[21] which was said to have risen on the site of her grave after her body had been stolen. Of a second spring, located further west and called Wihtburh's Well, which was recorded in the 18th century, no remains exist.[18]
Wihtburh's interment at Ely is first recorded in the Hyde Register, an 11th-century list of the burial places of English saints.[8][22] A sentence of the text of the register, now kept in theBritish Library asMS Stowe 944, reads:And Sancta Wihtburh hyre sweostor mid hyre nu þǽr resteð.[23] According to the register, she was placed near Æthelthryth, Sexburga, andErmenilda, Sexburga's daughter.[19]
In 1106, when their remains were moved closer to the mainaltar, the bodies of Wihtburh and her sisters were publicly displayed before a group ofbishops,abbots, andclergymen, includingAnselm, Archbishop of Canterbury. It was found that the body of Æthelthryth had been preserved and that Wihtburh was so conserved but that her limbs were flexible, her cheeks were rosy, and her breasts were firm, a sign of her body's vitality, youthfulness and "burgeoning productivity".[24]
The description of her life and miraculous incorruptibility closely follows that of Æthelthryth, who was also a virgin who founded an East Anglian monastery. According to Blanton, "the prominence of the tombs [of Wihtburh and other members of her family at Ely] demonstrated that kinship was an important ideological construct that needed to be presented visually".[2] This, and the family's inclusion in texts such theLiber Eliensis, "indicated a complementary focus on the strength and cohesion of this holy family as the cornerstone of the monastery's history".[2] Other documents originating from the abbey show that the cults of Wihtburh and her sisters Æthelthryth and Seaxburh formed part of what the historian Virginia Blanton describes as Ely's "ideology of kinship".[25] Ely strove to promote and enhance itself as a place renowned for its holiness and connections with the East Anglian royal family, something that was achieved by placing the royal tombs of Wihtburh and her sisters in close proximity, and documenting that the daughters of Anna were abbesses at Ely.[26]
The relics of the sisters were all destroyed during theReformation; no trace of the royal tombs, including that of Wihtburh, now exists.[19]

The process by which the story of Wihtburh was disseminated is not known for certain. Between 1325 and 1340, the EnglishchroniclerJohn of Tynemouth included thevitae of the Ely saints, including Wihtburh, in hisSanctilogium Angliae.[note 2] The work was enlarged during the 15th century and a revised edition printed in English byWynkyn de Worde in 1516 and translated into English byRichard Pynson the same year.[30]
Wihtburh is included as "St Withburge" inThe Lives of Women Saints of our Contrie of England, also Some Other Liues of Holie Women Written by Some of the Auncient Fathers, written during the first half of the 1610s.[30]
The story of Wihtburh appears only to have been influential at a local level; four images depict Wihtburh (as well as Æthelthryth) on Norfolk churchrood screens. According to Blanton, the depiction of the sisters together in these churches "was a result of, if not a directive of, Ely's narrative history".[31][note 3] The localized concentration of images suggests that Wihtburh's cult was never large, and was closely linked with the cult associated with her more illustrious sister, Æthelthryth.[36]
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