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St. Edward the Confessor
King of England, born in 1003; died 5 January, 1066. He was the son of
Ethelred II and Emma, daughter of Duke Richard of Normandy, being thus
half-brother to King Edmund Ironside, Ethelred's son by his first wife, and to
King Hardicanute, Emma's son by her second marriage with Canute. When hardly ten
years old he was sent with his brother Alfred into Normandy to be brought up at
the court of the duke his uncle, the Danes having gained the mastery in England.
Thus he spent the best years of his life in exile, the crown having been settled
by Canute, with Emma's consent, upon his own offspring by her. Early misfortune
thus taught Edward the folly of ambition, and he grew up in innocence,
delighting chiefly in assisting at Mass and the church offices, and in
association with religious, whilst not disdaining the pleasures of the chase, or
recreations suited to his station. Upon Canute's death in 1035 his illegitimate
son, Harold, seized the throne, Hardicanute being then in Denmark, and Edward
and his brother Alfred were persuaded to make an attempt to gain the crown,
which resulted in the cruel death of Alfred who had fallen into Harold's hands,
whilst Edward was obliged to return to Normandy. On Hardicanute's sudden death
in 1042, Edward was called by acclamation to the throne at the age of about
forty, being welcomed even by the Danish settlers owing to his gentle saintly
character. His reign was one of almost unbroken peace, the threatened invasion
of Canute's son, Sweyn of Norway, being averted by the opportune attack on him
by Sweyn of Denmark; and the internal difficulties occasioned by the ambition of
Earl Godwin and his sons being settled without bloodshed by Edward's own
gentleness and prudence. He undertook no wars except to repel an inroad of the
Welsh, and to assist Malcolm III of Scotland against Macbeth, the usurper of his
throne. Being devoid of personal ambition, Edward's one aim was the welfare of
his people. He remitted the odious Danegelt
, which had needlessly continued to
be levied; and though profuse in alms to the poor and for religious purposes, he
made his own royal patrimony suffice without imposing taxes. Such was the
contentment caused by the good St. Edward's laws
, that their enactment was
repeatedly demanded by later generations, when they felt themselves oppressed.
Yielding to the entreaty of his nobles, he accepted as his consort the
virtuous Editha, Earl Godwin's daughter. Having, however, made a vow of chastity,
he first required her agreement to live with him only as a sister. As he could
not leave his kingdom without injury to his people, the making of a pilgrimage
to St. Peter's tomb, to which he had bound himself, was commuted by the pope
into the rebuilding at Westminster of St. Peter's abbey, the dedication of which
took place but a week before his death, and in which he was buried. St. Edward
was the first King of England to touch for the king's evil
, many sufferers
from the disease were cured by him. He was canonized by Alexander III in 1161.
His feast is kept on the 13th of October, his incorrupt body having been
solemnly translated on that day in 1163 by St. Thomas of Canterbury in the
presence of King Henry II.
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