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St. Oswin
King and martyr, murdered at Gilling, near Richmond, Yorkshire, England, on
20 August, 651, son of Osric, King of Deira in Britain. On the murder of his
father by Cadwalla in 634, Oswin still quite young was carried away for safety
into Wessex, but returned on the death of his kinsman St. Oswald, in 642, either
because Oswy had bestowed upon him Deira, one portion of the Kingdom of
Northumbria, himself ruling Bernicia, or, as is more probable, because the
people of Deira chose him for king in preference to Oswy. Under his sway of
seven years, peace, order, and happiness reigned throughout the kingdom. But in
the relations between Oswy and Oswin there was apparent peace only, the former
was employing every subtlety to bring about his rival's death. At length Oswy
declared an open warfare, and Oswin, unable to meet the superior forces of his
adversary, disbanded his army, either from worldly prudence (Bede) or heroic
virtue (monk of Tynemouth), and made his way for greater security to Hunwald an
eorldoman upon whom he had lately conferred the fief of Gilling. Hunwald
promised to conceal him but treacherously betrayed him to Ethelwin, one of
Oswy's officers, and he was murdered. He was buried at Gilling and soon
afterwards transferred to Tynemouth, though another account says he was buried
at Tynemouth. The anonymous monk of St. Albans, who in the reign of King Stephen
was resident at Tynemouth, and there wrote the saint's life, says that his
memory was forgotten during the Danish troubles, but in 1065 his burial-place
was made known by an apparition to a monk named Edmund, and his relics were
translated on 11 March, 1100, and again on 20 August, 1103. At the dissolution
of the monasteries under Henry VIII there was still a shrine containing the body
and vestments of St. Oswin. A portion of his body was preserved as a relic at
Durham (cf. Smith, Bede
, III, xiv). Eanfleda, Oswy's queen, daughter of St.
Edwin, prevailed upon him to found in reparation a monastery at Gilling, some
remains of which still exist, though it was destroyed by the Danes. Bede in his
History
(III, xiv) gives a description of his character and features: most
generous to all men and above all things humble; tall of stature and of graceful
bearing, with pleasant manner and engaging address
. There is now preserved in
the British Museum (Cotton MS. Galba A.5.) a psalter which until the fire of
1731 bore the inscription Liber Oswini Regis.
TYNEMOUTH AND CAPGRAVE, Nova Legenda Angliae, ed. HORSTMAN, II (Oxford, 1901), 268; Acta SS., Aug., IV, 63; Surtees Soc. Publ.: Miscellanea Biographica, VIII, 1-59, and Introd. (London, 1834); Lives of English Saints, ed. NEWMAN (London, 1900); RAINE in Dict. of Christ. Biog., s.v.; and BUTLER, Lives of the Saints, III (Baltimore), 287-88.
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