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About Saint Wigstan
Saint Wigstan (?) (1)
M, #152563
Last Edited=2 Aug 2005
Consanguinity Index=0.39%
Saint Wigstan (?) is the son of Æflæd (?) and Wigmund (?). (1)
Forrás / Source:
http://www.thepeerage.com/p15257.htm#i152563 Wigstan (died 849), also known as Saint Wystan, was the son of Wigmund of Mercia and Ælfflæd, daughter of King Ceolwulf I of Mercia.
Wigstan may have been sub-king, or ealdorman, of the Hwicce, and may have ruled Mercia briefly in 840, before resigning the throne. Wigstan was killed by his successor, Beorhtwulf, who is said to have been his godfather. The cause of the dispute was Beorhtwulf's plan to marry his son Beorhtfrith to Wigstan's mother. Wigstan objected to the marriage, and Beorhtwulf's response was to have him killed at a meeting.
Wigstan's remains were reburied at Repton in 849, where his grandfather King Wiglaf was also buried, and a cult developed soon after. Repton became a centre of pilgrimage as a result. In the reign of Cnut the Great, his relics were translated to Evesham.
Of later kings of Mercia, Ceolwulf II is thought to be related to Wigstan, although the precise relationship is not known.
A Vita Sancti Wistani was written by Dominic of Evesham, a medieval prior of Evesham Abbey around 1130.[1] The name was used occasionally in the Middle Ages and again more recently, e.g. for Wystan Hugh Auden.[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wigstan_of_Mercia
Saint Wigstan's Timeline
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