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  1. Osburga se casa con Æthelwulf mientras todavía es rey de Kent bajo la autoridad de su padre Ecgberht, es decir, antes de 839. Tienen al menos seis hijos, cinco hijos y una hija: Æthelstan, rey de Kent bajo la autoridad de su padre hasta su muerte, hacia 852; Ethelbald, rey de Wessex desde 858 hasta 860;

  2. Osburga's existence is known only from Asser 's "Life of King Alfred". She is not named as witness to any charters, nor is her death reported in the " Anglo-Saxon Chronicle ". It is presumed, but nowhere recorded, that she was also the mother of Alfred's older brothers Æthelstan of Wessex , Æthelbald of Wessex , Æthelberht of Wessex , Æthelred of Wessex , and of his sister Æthelswith ...

  3. Osburh (or Osburga) was a Saint in Coventry, probably Anglo-Saxon but see below. Nothing about her life has survived to the present day. Her mortal remains were enshrined at Coventry. [1] Close to the Forest of Arden, Coventry was at that time a tiny settlement.

  4. cs.wikipedia.org › wiki › OsburgaOsburga – Wikipedie

    Osburga. Některá data mohou pocházet z datové položky. Osburh nebo také Osburga († před 856) byla první manželka krále Wessexu Æthelwulfa a matka Alfréda Velikého. Alfrédův životopisec Asser ji popisuje jako „tu nejzbožnější ženu, urozenou svou povahou i rodem“. [1] O existenci Osburgy víme jen z Asserova Života ...

  5. 3 de sept. de 2021 · Pilgrimages to St. Osburga’s shrine continued throughout the Middle Ages, and in 1410, following petitions of the laity and clergy of Coventry, an official feast in honor of this saint was established. Her reliquary stood in the south transept of the post-Conquest monastery church of Coventry. Her relics were translated in 1482 within the monastery. Her splendid shrine with relics, along ...

  6. www.wikidata.org › wiki › Q2296250Osburh - Wikidata

    Osburh Osburga of Isle of Wight of Wessex (Unknown) (est. 810 - bef. 856)

  7. 16 de oct. de 2023 · Kids Encyclopedia Facts. Osburh (or Osburga) was an Anglo-Saxon saint who rested at Coventry Cathedral. Although there is some tradition holding her to be an early 11th-century abbess of Coventry Abbey, it is suspected that her cult predates the Viking Age. A 14th-century note in MS Bodley 438 mentions an early nunnery at Coventry.