-
Wendreda, also
known as Wendreth, was an Anglo-Saxon nun, healer, and saint,
perhaps of the 7th century. She was
uncertainly reported as a
daughter of...
- She was a
daughter of Anna, King of East Anglia, and her
siblings were
Wendreda and
Seaxburh of Ely, both of whom
eventually retired from
secular life...
- 6,988; and
ecclesiastical parishes viz: St John, 3,685 St Mary, 634 St
Wendreda, 972. HM
Prison Whitemoor,
opened in 1991, lies
slightly to the northwest...
-
Tancred of
Thorney Torthred of
Thorney Tova of
Thorney Walstan of
Bawburgh Wendreda Wihtburh of Ely
Wulfric of
Holme East
Saxon Æthelburh of
Barking Hildelith...
-
Tancred of
Thorney Torthred of
Thorney Tova of
Thorney Walstan of
Bawburgh Wendreda Wihtburh of Ely
Wulfric of
Holme East
Saxon Æthelburh of
Barking Hildelith...
- a monastery. The
three daughters of Anna of East Anglia, Æthelthryth,
Wendreda,
Seaxburh of Ely, are ****ociated with the
founding of abbeys. The eminence...
- March, Cambridgeshire, England, and was
baptised on 7 June 1817 in St
Wendreda's Church, March. As a
child he
worked as a
waterman on the
waterways of...
-
often with
close royal links, they
include Guthlac, Etheldreda, Pega, and
Wendreda.
Hermitages on the
islands became centres of
communities which later developed...
- A
spring at
Exning was
named St
Wendreda's Well, and a
local legend had it that the seventh-century
Saint Wendreda used its
water for healing. Newmarket...
-
Tancred of
Thorney Torthred of
Thorney Tova of
Thorney Walstan of
Bawburgh Wendreda Wihtburh of Ely
Wulfric of
Holme East
Saxon Æthelburh of
Barking Hildelith...