Arilda of Oldbury explained

Honorific Prefix:Saint
Arilda
Birth Date:unknown
Death Date:5th or 6th-century
Feast Day:20 July
Venerated In:Roman Catholic Church
Anglican Communion
Birth Place:possibly Gloucestershire or Wales
Death Place:Oldbury-on-Severn, Gloucestershire
Titles:Virgin martyr
Patronage:Oldbury-on-Severn and Oldbury-on-the-Hill, Gloucestershire
Major Shrine:St Peter's Abbey, Gloucester (destroyed)

Arilda, or Arild, was a female saint from Oldbury-on-Severn in the English county of Gloucestershire. She probably lived in the 5th- or 6th-century and may have been of either Anglo-Saxon or Welsh origin.

Arilda was a virgin martyr who, according to John Leland, was slain by a youth named Municus when she refused to have sex with him.

Two churches in Gloucestershire are dedicated to Arilda, one at Oldbury-on-Severn near her traditional home, a second (St Arild's Church) at Oldbury-on-the-Hill. Both places were called "Aldberie" at the time of the Domesday Book in 1086, suggesting that their names may be derived from the saint.

Leland claims that Arilda lived in Kington, a hamlet in the parish of Oldbury-on-Severn, where there is a holy well bearing Arilda's name. The waters from the well are said to run red with her blood, though a more prosaic explanation is the presence of a red alga of the genus Hildenbrandia.[1]

There was a shrine to Arilda at St Peter's Abbey, Gloucester, which is now Gloucester Cathedral, but it was destroyed after the Dissolution of the Monasteries.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Saint Arilda. www.arilda.org. 2019-09-30.