List of Anglo-Saxon saints
The following list contains saints from Anglo-Saxon England during the period of Christianization until the Norman Conquest of England (c. AD 600 to 1066). It also includes other post-biblical saints who, while not themselves English, were strongly associated with particular religious houses in Anglo-Saxon England, for example, their relics reputedly resting with such houses or British saints of the Roman and post-Roman period (3rd to 6th centuries).
The only list of saints which has survived from the Anglo-Saxon period itself is the so-called Secgan, an 11th-century compilation enumerating 89 saints and their resting-places.[1]
Table
| Name | Century of death | Origin | Chief medieval resting place | Notes | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acca of Hexham | 8th | Northumbrian | Ripon / Durham / Peterborough | Relics translated to Durham 1032; Peterborough Abbey possessed relic in the 12th century [2] | 
| Æbbe of Abingdon | 7th | West Saxon | Oxford | Details uncertain [2] | 
| Æbbe "the Elder" of Coldingham | 7th | Northumbrian | Coldingham | Translated to Durham in the 11th century [2] | 
| Æbbe "the Younger" of Coldingham | 9th | Northumbrian | Coldingham | May be a doppelganger of Æbbe the Elder [3] | 
| Æbbe of Thanet | 8th | Kentish | Minster-in-Thanet | Also called Eormenburh, of which "Æbbe" may be a hypocoristic form [3] | 
| Ælfgar of Selwood | unknown | West Saxon | Selwood forest | Known only from 16th century source [3] | 
| Ælfgifu of Exeter | unknown | West Saxon | unknown | May be Ælfgifu of Shaftesbury [4] | 
| Ælfgifu of Shaftesbury | 10th | West Saxon | Shaftesbury | May be Ælfgifu of Exter [4] | 
| Ælfheah of Canterbury | 11th | West Saxon | Canterbury St Augustine's | His body lay in London Cathedral from 1012 to 1023, but was translated to Canterbury with the cooperation of Cnut | 
| Ælfheah of Winchester | 10th | West Saxon | Winchester Old Minster | |
| Ælfflæd of Whitby | 8th | Northumbrian | Whitby | |
| Ælfnoth of Stowe | 7th | Mercian | Stowe forest | |
| Ælfthryth of Crowland | 9th | Mercian | Crowland | |
| Ælfwald of Northumbria | 8th | Northumbrian | Hexham | |
| Æthelberht of Bedford | unknown | Mercian | Bedford | May be the same as Æthelberht of East Anglia [5] | 
| Æthelberht of East Anglia | 8th | East Anglian | Hereford | |
| Æthelberht of Kent | 7th | Kentish | Ramsey | |
| Æthelburh of Barking | 7th | East Saxon | Barking | Remaining relics in Barking were translated to Canterbury in 1030 [5] | 
| Æthelburh of Faremoutiers | 7th | East Anglian | Faremoutiers | |
| Æthelburh of Hackness | 8th | Northumbrian | Hackness | |
| Æthelburh of Kent | 7th | Kentish | Lyminge | |
| Æthelflæd of Ramsey | 10th | East Anglian | Ramsey | Wife of Æthelwine, Ealdorman of East Anglia [5] | 
| Æthelburh of Wilton | 9th | West Saxon | Wilton | Allegedly foundress of Wilton Abbey and half-sister of Ecgberht,[6] king of Wessex and Kent, her existence is unsubstantiated by reliable sources [7] | 
| Æthelflæd of Romsey | 10th | West Saxon | Romsey | |
| Æthelgar of Canterbury | 10th | West Saxon | Canterbury Christ Church | Cult attested in the resting-place list of Hugh Candidus [8] | 
| Æthelgyth of Coldingham | unknown | Northumbrian | Coldingham | |
| Æthelmod of Leominster | 7th | Mercian | Leominster | |
| Æthelnoth of Canterbury | 11th | West Saxon | Canterbury Christ Church | Although both Mabillon and the Bollandists counted him as a saint, there is no earlier evidence of a formal cult [9] | 
| Æthelred of Kent | 7th | Kentish | Ramsey | |
| Æthelred of Mercia | 8th | Mercian | Bradney | |
| Æthelsige of Ripon | unknown | Northumbrian | Ripon | Known only as sanctus Egelsi from a list of bishops resting at Ripon [10] | 
| Æthelstan of England | 10th | West Saxon | Malmesbury | The saints cult of the famous English warrior-king is attested in a resting-place list, but is otherwise poorly documented [8] | 
| Æthelthryth of Ely | 7th | East Anglian | Ely | Also called "St Audrey"[10] | 
| Æthelwold of Farne | 7th | Northumbrian | Various | |
| Æthelwold of Lindisfarne | 8th | Northumbrian | Lindisfarne | Bones left Lindisfarne in the 9th century with the community of St Cuthert; some bones were given to Westminster by King Edgar [11] | 
| Æthelwine of Athelney | 7th | West Saxon | Athelney | |
| Æthelwine of Coln | unknown | Mercian | Coln St Aldwyn | |
| Æthelwine of Lindsey | 7th | Mercian | unknown | There is no evidence of an early cult, but he is listed as a saint in Wilson's Martyrologie[12] | 
| Æthelwine of Sceldeforde | unknown | obscure | Sceldeforde | No identification of Sceldeforde is regarded as certain today [13] | 
| Æthelwold of Winchester | 10th | West Saxon | Winchester Old Minster | |
| Æthelwynn of Sodbury | unknown | Mercian | Old Sodbury | |
| Aidan of Lindisfarne | 7th | Gaelic / Northumbrian | Glastonbury | Bones moved from Lindisfarne to Glastonbury during time of Viking invasions [14] | 
| Alban | 3rd | Romano-British | St Albans | |
| Albinus of Canterbury | 8th | Kentish | Canterbury Christ Church | Evidence of cult comes from one resting-place list, but it is otherwise poorly documented [8] | 
| Albinus of Thorney | unknown | Mercian? | Thorney | May be Hwita, bishop of Lichfield | 
| Alchhild of Middleham | unknown | Northumbrian | Middleham | Possibly a daughter of King Oswig [15] | 
| Alchmund of Hexham | 8th | Northumbrian | Hexham | |
| Alchmund of Derby | 9th | Northumbrian | Derby | |
| Aldatus of Oxford | 6th | Romano-British? | Oxford / Gloucester | |
| Aldhelm of Sherbourne | 8th | West Saxon | Malmesbury | |
| Alfred the Great | 9th | West Saxon | Winchester | King of Wessex and Bretwalda. Saint by popular acclaim only, never formally canonised. Relics were lost at the Dissolution of the Monasteries. | 
| Amphibalus of St Albans | 3rd | Romano-British? | St Albans | Body at Aldeminstre in the Domesday Breviate resting-place list;[8] body 'discovered' at St Albans in 1178[16] | 
| Arilda of Oldbury | unknown | Romano-British? | Gloucester | |
| Athwulf of Thorney | 7th | East Anglian | Thorney | |
| Augustine of Canterbury | 7th | Roman | Canterbury St Augustine's | |
| Avbur of Stallingborough | unknown | obscure | Stallingborough | |
| Balthere of Tyningham | 8th | Northumbrian | Tyninghame / Durham | |
| Balthild of Romsey | 7th | Frankish / East Anglian | Romsey | |
| Barloc of Norbury | unknown | British | Norbury | |
| Beda of Jarrow | 8th | Northumbrian | Jarrow / Durham / Glastonbury | |
| Bega of Copeland | unknown | Gaelic / Northumbrian | St Bees | |
| Benedict Biscop | 7th | Northumbrian | Thorney | |
| Benignus of Glastonbury | unknown | West Saxon | Glastonbury | Also called Beonna [17] | 
| Beocca of Chertsey | 9th | West Saxon | Chertsey | 9th | 
| Beonna of Breedon | 9th | Mercian | Breedon-on-the-Hill | |
| Beorhthelm of Stafford | unknown | Mercian | Stafford | |
| Beorhthelm of Shaftesbury[18] | unknown | West Saxon | Shaftesbury | Some possibility that he is a 10th-century West Saxon bishop, several bearing this name [19] | 
| Beornstan the Archdeacon | unknown | Kentish | Canterbury St Augustine's | The saint-list "Catalogus Sanctorum in Anglia Pausantium" mentions an archdeacon called Byrnstan or Beornstan resting at St Augustine's [8] | 
| Beornstan of Winchester | 10th | West Saxon | Winchester Old Minster | |
| Beornwald of Bampton | 10th | West Saxon | Bampton | |
| Bercthun of Beverley | 8th | Northumbrian | Beverley | |
| Berhtwald of Canterbury | 8th | Kentish | Canterbury St Augustine's | |
| Bertha of Kent | 7th | Frankish / Kentish | Canterbury St Augustine's | Mention in the resting-place list of Hugh Candidus [8] | 
| Billfrith of Lindisfarne | 8th | Northumbrian | Durham | |
| Birinus of Dorchester | 7th | Roman | Winchester Old Minster | |
| Blaise | 4th | Roman | Canterbury Christ Church | Relics of Saint Blaise were held by Canterbury Christ Church, thought to have been brought from Rome in 908 by Archbishop Plegmund [20] | 
| Blitha of Martham | unknown | East Anglian | Martham | Mother of St Walstan [17] | 
| Boisil of Melrose | 7th | Gaelic / Northumbrian | Melrose / Durham | |
| Bosa of York | 8th | Northumbrian | York | |
| Botwine of Ripon | 8th | Northumbrian | Ripon | |
| Botwulf of Thorney | 7th | East Anglian | Thorney | |
| Brannoc of Braunton | unknown | British | Braunton | |
| Branwalator of Milton | unknown | British | Milton Abbas | |
| Ceadda of Lichfield | 7th | Northumbrian | Lichfield | |
| Ceatta of Lichfield | unknown | obscure | Lichfield | Possibly a duplication of Ceadda (above) [21] | 
| Cedd of Lichfield | 7th | Northumbrian | Lichfield | |
| Centwine of Wessex | 7th | West Saxon | Glastonbury | In the list of saints entitled "Catalogus Sanctorum in Anglia Pausantium", he is listed resting at Glastonbury Abbey [8] | 
| Ceolfrith of Monkwearmouth | 8th | Northumbrian | Langres / Glastonbury / Monkwearmouth | |
| Ceolwulf of Northumbria | 8th | Northumbrian | Lindisfarne | |
| Cett of Oundle | unknown | obscure | Oundle | |
| Credan of Bodmin | unknown | British | Bodmin | |
| Cissa of Crowland | 8th | East Anglian | Thorney | |
| Coenwulf of Mercia | 9th | Mercian | Winchcombe | |
| Congar of Congresbury | unknown | British | Congresbury | |
| Cotta of Breedon | 8th | Mercian | Breedon-on-the-Hill | |
| Credan of Evesham | 8th | Mercian | Evesham | |
| Cuthbald of Peterborough | 8th | East Anglian | Peterborough | |
| Cuthbert of Lindisfarne | 7th | Northumbrian | Durham | Bones originally at Lindisfarne, at various places including Carlisle, Norham, Crayke and Chester-le-Street, before settling at Durham in the late 10th century for the remainder of the Middle Ages [22] | 
| Cuthburh of Wimborne | 8th | West Saxon | Wimborne | |
| Cuthflæd of Lyminster | unknown | South Saxon | Lyminster | |
| Cuthmann of Steyning | unknown | South Saxon | Steyning | |
| Cwenburh of Wimborne | 8th | West Saxon | Wimborne | |
| Cyneburh of Castor | 7th | Mercian | Peterborough | |
| Cyneburh of Gloucester | 7th | Mercian | Gloucester | |
| Cynehelm of Mercia | 9th | Mercian | Winchcombe | |
| Cyneswith of Peterborough | 7th | Mercian | Peterborough | |
| Dachuna of Bodmin | unknown | British | Bodmin | |
| Decuman of Watchet | unknown | British | Watchet | |
| Deusdedit of Canterbury | 7th | Kentish | Canterbury St Augustine's / Leominster | |
| Diuma of Charlbury | 7th | Gaelic / Mercian | Charlbury | |
| Domnanuerdh of Beckley | unknown | obscure | Beckley | |
| Dryhthelm of Melrose | 8th | Northumbrian | Melrose | Famous for the vision of the afterlife attributed to him by Bede;[23] evidence for cult limited, but he is mentioned in the resting-place list of Hugh Candidus [8] | 
| Dunstan of Canterbury | 10th | West Saxon | Canterbury St Augustine's | |
| Eadberht of Lindisfarne | 7th | Northumbrian | Lindisfarne | According to tradition, his bones were taken from Lindisfarne in the late 9th century [24] | 
| Eadburh of Bicester | 7th | Mercian | Bicester | |
| Eadburh of Pershore | unknown | Mercian | Pershore | possibly identified with Eadburh of Winchester | 
| Eadburh of Southwell | unknown | Mercian | Southwell | |
| Eadburh of Thanet | 8th | Kentish | Lyminge | |
| Eadburh of Winchester | 10th | West Saxon | Winchester Nunnaminster | |
| Eadfrith of Leominster | 7th | Northumbrian | Leominster | |
| Eadfrith of Lindisfarne | 8th | Northumbrian | Lindisfarne | Tradition has it that his bones were taken from Lindisfarne in the late 9th century [25] | 
| Eadgar of England | 10th | West Saxon | Glastonbury | |
| Eadgyth of Aylesbury | unknown | Mercian | Aylesbury | |
| Eadgyth of Polesworth | 10th | West Saxon | Polesworth | |
| Eadgyth of Wilton | 10th | West Saxon | Wilton | |
| Eadmund of East Anglia | 9th | East Anglian | Bury St Edmunds | |
| Eadmund the Confessor | unknown | obscure | unknown | Known only in the litany from Lambeth Palace MS 427, a 15th-century addition to a psalter of the 11th century [26] | 
| Eadnoth of Ramsey | 11th | East Anglian | Ely | |
| Eadthryth of Grantham | unknown | obscure | Grantham | |
| Eadweard the Confessor | 11th | West Saxon | Westminster | |
| Eadweard the Martyr | 10th | West Saxon | Shaftesbury | |
| Eadweard of Maugersbury | unknown | Mercian | Maugersbury / Stow-on-the-Wold | |
| Eadwine of Northumbria | 7th | Northumbrian | Whitby / York | |
| Eadwold of Cerne | 9th | West Saxon | Cerne Abbas | |
| Ealdberht of Ripon | 8th | Northumbrian | Ripon / Peterborough | |
| Ealdgyth of Stortford | unknown | Mercian | Bishops Stortford | |
| Eanmund | 8th | Northumbrian | unknown | |
| Eanswith of Folkestone | 7th | Kentish | Folkestone | |
| Earconwald | 7th | Mercian | London / Chertsey | |
| Eardwulf of Northumbria | 9th | Northumbrian | Breedon-on-the-Hill | |
| Earmund of Stoke Fleming | unknown | West Saxon | Stoke Fleming | |
| Eata of Hexham | 7th | Northumbrian | Hexham | |
| Ecgberht of Ripon | 8th | Northumbrian | Ripon | |
| Ecgwine of Evesham | 8th | Mercian | Evesham | |
| Echa of Crayke | 8th | Gaelic / Northumbrian | Crayke | |
| Edor of Chertsey | 9th | West Saxon | Chertsey | |
| Elfin of Warrington | unknown | British | Warrington | |
| Eoda | 7th | Northumbrian | unknown | may be identical with St. Oda | 
| Eormengyth of Thanet | 7th | Kentish | Minster-in-Thanet | |
| Eosterwine of Monkwearmouth | 7th | Northumbrian | Monkwearmouth | |
| Evorhilda | unknown | West Saxon | Poppleton | |
| Felix of Dommoc | 7th | Frankish | Ramsey | |
| Firmin of North Crawley | unknown | Roman? | North Crawley / Thorney | Compare Fermin, martyr and bishop of Amiens | 
| Florentius of Peterborough | unknown | Roman | Peterborough | According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle MS E, his relics were transferred from Bonneval Abbey to Peterborough in 1013; he is perhaps Florentius of Sedun, martyred by the Vandals[27] | 
| Freomund of Mercia | 9th | Mercian | Dunstable | |
| Frithestan of Winchester | 10th | West Saxon | Winchester Old Minster | |
| Frithuric of Breedon | 7th | Mercian | Breedon-on-the-Hill | |
| Frithuswith of Oxford | 8th | Mercian | Oxford | |
| Frithuwold of Chertsey | 7th | Mercian | Chertsey | |
| Fursey of Cnobheresburg | 7th | Gaelic / East Anglian | Péronne | |
| Grimbald of St Bertin | 10th | Frankish | Winchester New Minster | |
| Guthlac of Crowland | 8th | East Anglian | Crowland | |
| Hadrian of Canterbury | 8th | Roman | Canterbury St Augustine's | Born in the Roman exarchate of Africa, conquered by the Arabs in Hadrian's lifetime [28] | 
| Hædde of Winchester | 8th | West Saxon | Winchester Old Minster | |
| Hæmma of Leominster | 7th | Mercian | Leominster | |
| Hereberht of Huntingdon | unknown | obscure | unknown | |
| Herefrith of Thorney | unknown | East Anglian | Thorney | May have been a bishop of Lindsey [28] | 
| Hilda of Whitby | 7th | Northumbrian | Whitby / Glastonbury | |
| Hildeburh | 7th | Mercia | Dee Estuary | |
| Hildelith of Barking | 8th | East Saxon | Barking | |
| Hiurmine of Blythburgh | 7th | East Anglian | Blythburgh / Bury St Edmunds | |
| Honorius of Canterbury | 7th | Roman | Canterbury St Augustine's | |
| Huna of Thorney | 7th | East Anglian | Thorney | |
| Humbert of Stokenham | unknown | West Saxon | Stokenham | |
| Hwita of Whitchurch Canonicorum | unknown | West Saxon | Whitchurch Canonicorum | |
| Hygebald of Lindsey | 7th | obscure | Hibaldstow | |
| Hyglac | 8th | Northumbrian | unknown | |
| Indract of Glastonbury | 9th | Gaelic / West Saxon | Glastonbury | |
| Inicium | unknown | obscure | Thorney | Body appears to have been in Bochesuurtha, perhaps either Boxworth or Buckworth, before resting at Thorney [29] | 
| Ivo of Ramsey | unknown | British | Ramsey | |
| Iwig of Wilton | 7th | Northumbrian | Wilton | |
| Jermin | 8th | East Anglian | Bury St. Edmunds | Killed at the Battle of Bulcamp, his body was translated from Blythburgh. Also known as Jurmin | 
| John of Beverley | 8th | Northumbrian | Beverley | |
| John the Sage | unknown | obscure | Malmesbury | William of Malmesbury believed this saint to be John Scotus Erigena, while historian Michael Lapidge has suggested John the Old Saxon, scholar of Alfred the Great [30] | 
| Judoc of Winchester | 7th | British | Winchester New Minster | |
| Jurmin | 7th | East Anglian | Killed in Battle with Penda | Prince of East Anglia, Son of King Anna | 
| Justus of Canterbury | 7th | Roman | Canterbury St Augustine's | |
| Juthwara of Sherborne | 6th | Dumnonia, sub-Roman British | Sherborne | |
| Laurence of Canterbury | 7th | Roman | Canterbury St Augustine's | |
| Leofwynn of Bishopstone | 7th | South Saxon | Bishopstone | |
| Mærwynn of Romsey | 10th | West Saxon | Romsey | |
| Maildub of Malmesbury | 7th | Gaelic / West Saxon | Malmesbury | |
| Margaret of Wessex | 11th | West Saxon | Dunfermline | |
| Mellitus of Canterbury | 7th | Roman | Canterbury St Augustine's | |
| Melorius of Amesbury | unknown | British | Amesbury | |
| Merefin | unknown | Mercian | unknown | |
| Mildburh of Wenlock | 8th | Mercian | Wenlock | |
| Mildgyth | 8th | Mercian | unknown | |
| Mildrith of Thanet | 8th | Mercian | Minster-in-Thanet / Canterbury St Augustine's | |
| Milred of Worcester | 8th | Mercian | Berkswell | |
| Modwenna of Burton | unknown | Gaelic / Mercian | Burton | |
| Monegunda of Watton | 6th | Frankish | Watton | |
| Nectan of Hartland | unknown | British | Hartland | |
| Neot | unknown | British | St Neots | |
| Nothhelm of Canterbury | 8th | Kentish | Canterbury St Augustine's | |
| Oda of Canterbury | 10th | Anglo-Norse | Canterbury Christ Church | |
| Odwulf of Evesham | 9th | Frisian | Evesham | |
| Osana of Howden | 8th? | Northumbrian | Howden | |
| Osburh of Coventry | unknown | Mercian | Coventry | |
| Osgyth | 7th | East Saxon | Chich / Aylesbury | |
| Osthryth | 7th | Northumbrian | Bardney | |
| Oswald of Northumbria | 7th | Northumbrian | Lindisfarne / Gloucester / various | Body rested at Bardney, hands at Bamburgh and head at Lindisfarne in the time of Bede; body was translated to Gloucester in 909; the right-arm was later at Peterborough, with the head at Durham and some other bones at Glastonbury [31] | 
| Oswald of Worcester | 10th | Anglo-Norse | Worcester | |
| Oswine of Northumbria | 7th | Northumbrian | Tynemouth / Durham | Despite a brief period at Durham, Oswine rested at Tynemouth Priory; Durham possessed the head [32] | 
| Pandionia of Eltisley | unknown | obscure | Eltisley | |
| Patrick | unknown | Romano-British | Glastonbury (/Armagh) | Body was alleged to be buried at Glastonbury in the Anglo-Saxon period, though it was discovered by John de Courcy and translated to Armagh Cathedral in 1185[33] | 
| Paulinus of York | 7th | Roman | Rochester | |
| Pega of Peakirk | 8th | East Anglian | Peakirk | |
| Rayne | unknown | obscure | unknown | |
| Regenhere of Northampton | 9th | East Anglian | Northampton | |
| Ruffinus of Stone | 7th | Mercia | Stone | |
| Rumon of Tavistock | unknown | British | Ruan Lanihorne / Tavistock | |
| Rumwold of Buckingham | unknown | Mercian | Buckingham | |
| Samson of Dol | 6th | British | Milton Abbas | |
| Sæbbi of London | 7th | East Saxon | London | Cult uncertain [34] | 
| Sativola of Exeter | 6th | Dumnonia Sub-Roman British | Exeter | Venerated throughout the Middle Ages in Devon, she has been linked with the 6th Cornish anchoress Sitofolla, sister of Paul Aurelian [35] | 
| Seaxburh of Ely | 8th | East Anglian | Ely | |
| Sicgred of Ripon | 8th | Northumbrian | Ripon / Peterborough | |
| Sigeburh of Thanet | 8th | Kentish | Minster-in-Thanet | |
| Sigfrith of Monkwearmouth | 7th | Northumbrian | Monkwearmouth | |
| Swithhun of Winchester | 9th | West Saxon | Winchester Old Minster | |
| Tatberht of Ripon | 8th | Northumbrian | Ripon / Peterborough | |
| Tancred of Thorney | 9th | East Anglian | Thorney | |
| Torthred of Thorney | 9th | East Anglian | Thorney | |
| Tova of Thorney | 9th | East Anglian | Thorney | |
| Theodore of Canterbury | 7th | Roman | Canterbury St Augustine's | |
| Tibba of Ryhall | 7th | Mercian | Ryhall / Peterborough | |
| Ultan the Scribe | 8th | Gaelic / Northumbrian | unknown | Gaelic scribe-priest known only from the 9th-century work of a monk named Æthelwulf, De Abbatibus [36] | 
| Urith of Chittlehampton | unknown | British | Chittlehampton | In Latin, Hyaritha; name probably represents Welsh Iwerydd [36] | 
| Wendreda | 7th | East Anglian | Ely/March, Cambridgeshire | |
| Werburh of Chester | 8th | Mercian | Hanbury / Chester | |
| Wærstan | unknown | Mercian | Great Malvern | |
| Walstan of Bawburgh | unknown | East Anglian | Bawburgh | |
| Wigstan of Repton | 9th | Mercian | Repton / Evesham | |
| Wihtberht | 8th | Northumbrian | Ripon | |
| Wihtburh of Ely | 8th | East Anglian | Ely | |
| Wihtred of Thorney | unknown | obscure | Thorney | |
| Wilfrith of Hexham | 8th | Northumbrian | Ripon / Canterbury Christ Church | |
| Wilfrith II | 8th | Northumbrian | Ripon | |
| Wilgils of Ripon | 7th | Northumbrian | Ripon / Peterborough | |
| Wilgyth of Cholsey | 6th | Dumnonia, sub-Roman Britain | Cholsey | |
| Wulfgar of Peterborough | unknown | obscure | Peterborough | |
| Wulfhad of Stone | 7th | obscure | Stone | |
| Wulfhild of Barking | 11th | Mercian | Barking | |
| Wulfram of Grantham | 8th | Frankish | Grantham | |
| Wulfric of Holme | 10th | East Anglian | Holme | |
| Wulfsige of Sherborne | 11th | West Saxon | Sherborne | |
| Wulfthryth | 11th | West Saxon | Wilton | |
| Wynthryth of March | unknown | obscure | March / Ely | 
- Anglo-Norse, of mixed English and Scandinavian extraction characteristic of northern and central England in the later Anglo-Saxon era
 - British, from the British population native to pre-Germanic England, including Welsh, Cornish, Cumbrian and Celtic Armoricans, as well as saints from regions of England Anglicized very late
 - East Anglian, ethnically English and either from or strong associated with the East Anglian region of early medieval England, modern Norfolk, Suffolk as well as some of Cambridgeshire or Lincolnshire
 - East Saxon, ethnically English and either from or strong associated with the East Saxon region of early medieval England
 - Frankish, from the Frankish kingdom in Gaul, including native Latin-speakers but excluding Bretons
 - Frisian, from the Frisian region of early medieval Europe
 - Gaelic, in origin a Gaelic-speaking Celt from Ireland or northern Britain
 - Kentish, ethnically English and either from or strong associated with the Kentish region of early medieval England
 - Mercian, ethnically English and either from or strong associated with the Mercian region of early medieval England
 - Northumbrian, ethnically English and either from or strong associated with the Northumbrian region of early medieval England
 - Roman, from the Roman (or 'Byzantine') Empire, excluding Britain
 - Romano-British, from Roman Britain and neither clearly British or clearly Latin
 - South Saxon, ethnically English and either from or strongly associated with the South Saxon region of early medieval England
 - West Saxon, ethnically English and either from or strongly associated with the West Saxon region of early medieval England
 
See also
Notes
- ↑ D. W. Rollason, "Lists of saints' resting-places in Anglo-Saxon England" in ASE 7 (1978), p. 62
 - 1 2 3 Blair, "Handlist", p. 502
 - 1 2 3 Blair, "Handlist", p. 503
 - 1 2 Blair, "Handlist", p. 504
 - 1 2 3 Blair, "Handlist", p. 506
 - ↑ Farmer, Oxford Dictionary of Saints, s.v. "Alburga", p. 13
 - ↑ Yorke, Nunneries, p. 76
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Blair, "Handlist", p. 563
 - ↑ Farmer, Oxford Dictionary of Saints, s.v. "Ethelnoth", p. 166
 - 1 2 Blair, "Handlist", p. 507
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 508
 - ↑ Farmer, Oxford Dictionary of Saints, s.v. "Elwin", p. 157
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", pp. 508–09
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 510
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 511
 - ↑ Farmer, Oxford Dictionary of Saints, s.v. "Amphibalus", p. 20
 - 1 2 Blair, "Handlist", p. 515
 - ↑ Known only from the Hagiography of the Secgan Manuscript. Stowe MS 944, British Library.
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 516
 - ↑ Pfaff, "The Calendar", p. 66
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 520
 - ↑ Woolf, Pictland to Alba, pp. 79–86
 - ↑ Farmer, Oxford Dictionary of Saints, s.v. "Drithelm", p. 136
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 525
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 527
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 528
 - ↑ Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, p. 144, n. 8
 - 1 2 Blair, "Handlist", p. 537
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", pp. 540–41
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 542
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", pp. 549–50; Craig, "Oswald"
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", pp. 550–51
 - ↑ Stancliffe, "Patrick"
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 564
 - ↑ Blair, "Handlist", p. 554
 - 1 2 Blair, "Handlist", p. 557
 
References
- Blair, John (2002), "A Handlist of Anglo-Saxon Saints", in Thacker, Alan; Sharpe, Richard, Local Saints and Local Churches in the Early Medieval West, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 495–565, ISBN 0-19-820394-2
 - Craig, D. J. (2004), "Oswald [St Oswald] (603/4–642), king of Northumbria", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, retrieved 2011-02-06
 - Farmer, David Hugh (1992), The Oxford Dictionary of Saints (New ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-283069-4
 - F. Liebermann, Die Heiligen Englands, Hanover, 1889.
 - Pfaff, Richard W. (1992), "The Calendar", in Gibson, Margaret T.; Heslop, T. A.; Pfaff, William, The Eadwine Psalter: Text, Image, and Monastic Culture in Twelfth-Century Canterbury, London: The Modern Humanities Research Association (in conjunction with The Pennsylvania State University Press), pp. 62–87, ISBN 0-947623-46-9
 - Susan J. Ridyard, The Royal Saints of Anglo-Saxon England: A Study of West Saxon and East Anglican Cults, Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series, 1988.
 - D. W. Rollason, "Lists of saints' resting-places in Anglo-Saxon England" in ASE 7 (1978), 61-93.
 - Stancliffe, Clare (2004), "Patrick (fl. 5th cent.), patron saint of Ireland", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, retrieved 2011-02-07
 - Swanton, Michael, ed. (2000), The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles (New ed.), London: Phoenix Press, ISBN 1-84212-003-4
 - Woolf, Alex (2007), From Pictland to Alba, 789–1070, The New Edinburgh History of Scotland, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 978-0-7486-1234-5
 - Yorke, Barbara (2003), Nunneries and the Anglo-Saxon Royal Houses, London: Continuum, ISBN 0-8264-6040-2
 
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