Saints Edith and Aethelthryth: Princesses, Miracle Workers, and their
Late Medieval Audience narrates the lives of two Anglo-Saxon princesses
who were venerated as saints long after their deaths. St Edith, the
daughter of King Edgar, was renowned as a patron of the arts and the
church during her lifetime; her posthumous miracles included protection
of Wilton Abbey and the English royal family. St Aethelthryth, who
retained her virginity through not one but two royal marriages, also
worked numerous miracles at her tomb at the Abbey of Ely. The poems,
composed at Wilton Abbey in the early fifteenth century, allow us to see
how late medieval religious women practised their devotion to early
medieval women saints. The Middle English verse texts are presented here
in the original and in translation with explanatory notes and glossary.
A thorough introduction provides extensive contextualization and
analysis of the two poems as well as description of the manuscript and
its language and prosody. These primary source texts are important
contributions to the study of English history, language, literature,
religion, and women's studies.