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ST. WALBURGE,* V. ABBESS
SHE was daughter to the holy king St. Richard, and
sister to SS. Willibald and Winebald; was born in the kingdom of the
West-Saxons in England, and educated in the monastery of Winburn in
Dorsetshire, where she took the religious veil. After having passed
twenty-seven years in this holy nunnery, she was sent by the abbess
Tetta, under the conduct of St. Lioba, with several others, into
Germany, at the request of her cousin, St. Bomface.† Her first
settlement in that country was under St. Lioba, in the monastery of
Bischofsheim, in the diocese of Mentz. Two years after she was
appointed abbess of a nunnery founded by her two brothers, at
Heidenheim in Suabia, (now subject to the duke of Wirtemberg,) where
her brother, St. Winebald, took upon him at the same time the
government of an abbey of monks. This town is situated in the diocese
of Aichstadt, in Franconia, upon the borders of Bavaria, of which St.
Willibald, our saint’s other brother, had been consecrated
bishop by St. Boniface. So eminent was the spirit of evangelical
charity, meekness, and piety, which all the words and actions of St.
Walburge breathed, and so remarkable was the fruit which her zeal and
example produced in others, that when St. Winebald died, in 760, she
was charged with a superintendency also over the abbey of monks till
her death. St. Willibald caused the remains of their brother Winebald
to be removed to Aichstadt, sixteen years after his death; at which
ceremony St. Walburge assisted. Two years after she passed herself to
eternal rest, on the 25th of February, in 779, having lived
twenty-five years at Heidenheim. Her relics were translated, in the
year 870, to Aichstadt, on the 21st of September, and the principal
part still remains there in the church anciently called of the Holy
Cross, but since that time of St. Walburge. A considerable portion is
venerated with singular devotion at Furnes, where, by the pious zeal
of Baldwin, surnamed of Iron, it was received on the 25th of April,
and enshrined on the 1st of May, on which day her chief festival is
placed in the Belgic Martyrologies, imitated by Baronius in the
Roman. From Furnes certain small parts have been distributed in
several other towns in the Low Countries, especially at Antwerp,
Brussels, Tiel, Arnhem, Groningue, and Zutphen; also Cologne,
Wirtemberg, Ausberg, Christ Church at Canterbury, and other places,
were enriched with particles of this treasure from Aichstadt. St.
Walburge is titular saint of many other great churches in Germany,
Brabant, Flanders, and several provinces of France, especially in
Poitou, Perche, Normandy, Burgundy, Lorraine, Alsace, &c. Her
festival, on account of various translations of her relics, is marked
on several days of the year, but the principal is kept in most places
on the day of her death. A portion of her relics was preserved in a
rich shrine in the repository of relics in the electoral palace of
Hanover, as appears from the catalogue printed in folio at Hanover in
1713. See her life written by Wolf-hard, a devout priest of
Aichstadt, in the following century, about the year 890, again by
Adelbold, nineteenth bishop of Utrecht, (of which diocess Heda calls
her patroness;) thirdly, by an anonymous author; fourthly, by the
poet Medibard; fifthly, by Philip, bishop of Aichstadt; sixthly, by
an anonymous author, at the request of the nuns of St. Walburge of
Aichstadt. All these six lives are published by Henschenius. See also
Raderus, in Bavaria Sancta, t. 3, p. 4. Gretser, de Sanctis
Eystettensibus, &c.
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