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  1. 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 ...

  2. 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.

  3. Osburga (Osburga Oslacsdotter) bila je prva supruga kralja Æthelwulfa, kojem je rodila sina Alfreda. Prema biografu kralja Alfreda, Osburga je bila „plemenita žena“. Ovo su Æthelwulfova i Osburgina djeca:

  4. 30 de mar. de 2022 · Saint Osburga, who founded a nunnery which was reportedly the first settlements in the Coventry. Refounded by Leofric and Godiva in 1043 after it's destruction by the Vikings, Osburga's monastery grew into the city's first Cathedral of St Mary, and her shrine was venerated and became a place of pilgrimage throughout the Middle Ages.

  5. Ælfred, delighted with the beauty of the illuminated initial letters, went to a master, who read the poems over to him until he knew them by heart. It is impossible to believe that this story refers to Judith, who was a mere girl in 861 [see under Ælfred, u.s.] Osburga is said by Asser to have been a noble-minded and deeply religious woman.

  6. 4 de sept. de 2012 · Osburh ("Osburga") was daughter of Earl Olsac the Thane, Grand Butler of England (known as The Cupbearer). References: [JAMS],[AR7],[Weis1]

  7. Æthelwulf ( Old English: [ˈæðelwuɫf]; [1] Old English for "Noble Wolf"; [2] died 13 January 858) was King of Wessex from 839 to 858. [a] In 825, his father, King Ecgberht, defeated King Beornwulf of Mercia, ending a long Mercian dominance over Anglo-Saxon England south of the Humber. Ecgberht sent Æthelwulf with an army to Kent, where he ...