Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Æthelgifu, abbess of Shaftesbury

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Parents
  
Alfred the Great

Aunt
  
Æthelswith

Grandparents
  
Æthelwulf, Osburh

Cousins
  
Æthelwold ætheling, Æthelhelm, Oswald?

Great-grandparents
  
Egbert of Wessex, Redburga, Oslac of York

Uncles
  
Æthelred of Wessex, Æthelbald - King of Wessex, Æthelberht - King of Wessex

Similar
  
Alfred the Great, Ealhswith, Æthelflæd, Edward the Elder, Osburh

Æthelgifu ([æðeljivu]), was the daughter of King Alfred the Great, an Anglo-Saxon king of the 9th century. She was the third of Alfred's five children and the second eldest daughter. She was likely born sometime in the 870s.

A Welsh monk named Asser who wrote a biography of Alfred the Great, described her as 'devoted to God through her holy virginity, subject and consecrated to the rule of monastic life, entered the service of God'. She was said to have become a nun as a result of her bad health.

Alfred founded Shaftesbury Abbey ca. 890 and placed Æthelgifu as its first abbess. This Abbey along with Aethelney monastery (for monks) received 1/8 of Alfred's annual revenue in support. It appears to have housed nuns from an upper-class background. Very little is known about Æthelgifu's time as abbess.

In Alfred's will, there is mention of two estates left 'to his middle daughter Æthelgifu' at Kingsclere and at Candover in Hampshire, and the will itself makes no mention of her role as abbess. It is possible that the will was written before Æthelgifu became abbess, or it is possible that these estates were given to her while she was abbess, but they reverted to the male line once she died.

References

Æthelgifu, abbess of Shaftesbury Wikipedia


Similar Topics