Wigstan Explained

Wigstan (Wystan, Wistan)
Feast Day:1 June
Honored In:Roman Catholic Church
Anglican Communion
Eastern Orthodox Church
Titles:Martyr
Major Shrine:Evesham Abbey (destroyed)

Wigstan (pronounced as /ang/; died c. 840 AD), also known as Saint Wystan, was the son of Wigmund of Mercia and Ælfflæd, daughter of King Ceolwulf I of Mercia.

History

Like many Mercians of the period very little is known about Wigstan. He was the son of Wigmund and Ælfflæd, both the offspring of Mercian kings, Wiglaf and Ceolwulf I respectively. Wigmund, according to the Croyland Chronicle, died of dysentery before his father King Wiglaf, making Wigstan heir to the kingdom of Mercia. However, when Wiglaf died in 839, Wigstan declined the kingship preferring religious life and monastic orders instead. Beorhtwulf, possibly Wigstan's great-uncle, became king instead. William of Malmesbury claims that Beorhtwulf's son, Beorhtfrith, wished to marry Wigstan's widowed mother, Ælfflæd, but Wigstan forbade the union as they were too closely related.[1] As revenge Beorhtfrith went to visit the young King ostensibly in peace but, when the two greeted each other, he struck Wigstan on the head with the shaft of his dagger and his servant ran him through with his sword.

The site of Wigstan's martyrdom has been variously claimed to be Wistanstow, Shropshire,[2] and Wistow, Leicestershire, with Wigston being the nearest town which happens to be derived from his name. Wigstan became a famous saint and Repton became a centre of pilgrimage as a result, which led Cnut the Great to move Wigstan's relics to Evesham, where the Latin: Vita Sancti Wistani was written by Dominic of Evesham, a medieval prior there.[3] [4]

Hagiography

The saint's relics were relocated to the Abbey at Evesham.[5] His vita (meaning "life", a history recording reputed acts of sanctity) has been attributed to the Benedictine chronicler Dominic of Evesham, an early 12th-century Prior at Evesham. The edifice of the abbey (including the tomb of the four saints and many monastic buildings) were demolished during the Dissolution of the Monasteries.

Noted Edwardian artist Margaret E.A. Rope was commissioned for the windows in the parish church of Wistanstow in Shropshire dedicated to the miraculous pillar of light, leading to discovery of the earthly remains of the slain martyr.

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=-1HS5gCZ1w4C&dq=Saint+Tyfei&pg=PA81 Wasyliw, Patricia Healy. Martyrdom, Murder, and Magic: Child Saints and Their Cults in Medieval Europe, Peter Lang, 2008, p. 78
  2. St. Wistan, Prince of Mercia, Martyr, in Butler's Lives of Saints
  3. http://www.valeofevesham.net/#/timeline/4536196845 "Timeline", Vale of Evesham Historical Society
  4. Jennings "Writings" English Historical Review p. 298
  5. On St. Wigstan see ‘The Medieval Hagiography of Saint Ecgwine’, p.79 & p.83. This notes that Abbot Ælfweard occupied himself with increasing Evesham’s prestige, and instigated the translation of Saint Wigstan to Evesham, and Evesham Abbey and the Parish Churches: A Guide, p.8. E.J. Rudge, p.13 notes that Ælfweard entreated King Canute to present the abbey church with the relics of Wystan. George May (1834), p.47 refers to St Wulstan. Also see The Victoria History of the County of Worcester, p.387 and ‘The Mitred Abbey of St. Mary, Evesham’, p.12.
  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpblaBb93fo video clip of W. H. Auden reading a poem, bearing his full name
  7. http://liberalengland.blogspot.com/2007/03/martyrdom-of-st-wystan.html Liberal England blog