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==References==
==References==
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*Source cited by 'The Peerage.com' - Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 3.
*Source cited by 'The Peerage.com' - Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 3.
*[[William Dugdale]], ''Monasticon'' (Wilton)
*[[William Dugdale]], ''Monasticon'' (Wilton)
*[http://openlibrary.org/b/OL7210836M/menology_of_England_and_Wales Richard Stanton, ''A Menology of England and Wales'' (1892)]
*[http://openlibrary.org/b/OL7210836M/menology_of_England_and_Wales Richard Stanton, ''A Menology of England and Wales'' (1892)]
{{Anglo-Saxon saints}}
{{Anglo-Saxon saints}}
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{{Persondata
{{Persondata

Revision as of 15:00, 30 January 2016

Æthelburh or Alburga of Wilton (died 810), was a member of the royal house of Wessex, abbess of Wilton and a saint.

Alburga was the daughter of Ealhmund of Kent, Subregulus of Kent, half-sister of Egbert, King of Wessex, and wife of Wulfstan, ealdorman of Wiltshire (also known as Weohstan).[1]

On her husband's death in 802, she turned the college of secular priests which he had established in an old church in Wilton, Wiltshire, into a Benedictine convent with twelve nuns, of which she became the abbess and is held to be the founder.[2] She died there on Christmas Day 810, and her feast is celebrated accordingly on 25 December.

References

  1. ^ The Peerage.com - Saint Alburga
  2. ^ Farmer, D.H.: The Oxford Dictionary of Saints, p. 10

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