The main modern shrine of St Etheldreda is located within the Church of St Etheldreda in Ely. In medieval England the principal shrine of St Etheldreda was at the
Abbey of Ely. St Etheldreda was one of the most popular Anglo-Saxon saints and her shrine was one of the five most visited in medieval England. An analysis of Shrine offerings during the medieval period, for example, shows her shrine to be a major centre of pilgrimage until the 1520s. At the heart of St Etheldreda's cult was that her body was found to be
incorrupt, remaining whole and lifelike in the grave, rather than decomposing. This was recorded initially by
Bede in Bk 4, chp 19 of the
History of the English Church thus helping her cult to become established and well known from an early date. During the medieval period the Abbeys or Cathedral churches of Durham, Glastonbury, Salisbury, Thetford, Waltham and York all claimed to have relics, or small parts of the body of St Etheldreda. It cannot now be confirmed whether these were authentic relics or not, but the nineteenth-century discovery of a relic, recorded below, supports the idea that relics of St Etheldreda may well have been distributed wider than the main shrine. Besides the principal relic of the body of St Etheldreda, the cult of St Etheldreda seems to have also involved the distribution of lace necklaces and other objects which were claimed to have been associated with St Etheldreda. Records of the visitation of Dr Layton and Dr Leigh in 1536 make reference to cloths for women with sore throats and sore breasts, a comb of St Etheldreda for women with headaches and a ring of St Etheldreda for women seeking relief when 'lying-in' in childbirth. There is also a small eighth-century carved frieze found in a barn wall at St John's Farm near Ely, which is thought to come from the shrine. Parts of the canopy of
Bishop Hotham's tomb, within the Cathedral of Ely, have also been claimed as parts of the shrine. The fact that so little of the original shrine survives is probably due to the fact that Prior Robert Wells and the 23 monks who signed the deed of surrender on 18 Nov 1539 seem to have been largely sympathetic to the ideas of the Reformation and so many of them took positions in the new church or drew pensions from the Crown. The exact date of the destruction of the medieval shrine cannot be pinpointed with accuracy, but it probably took place following
Thomas Goodrich's instruction to the clergy of Ely diocese on 21 October 1541, commanding that "all images, relicks, table monuments of miracles and shrines" should be demolished and obliterated. Reference to the actual destruction of the shrine was made by Dr
John Caius (later to found Caius College, Cambridge) as he records his surprise at finding that it was built out of stone, not marble, as might have been expected. Nevertheless, official records show that some 361 ounces of gold and 5,040 ounces of gold and white plate were taken from the shrine into the royal treasury. The modern relic of Saint Etheldreda, consisting of her left hand, was found preserved in a separate reliquary, hidden in a priest's hiding hole in a house in Sussex in about 1811. It was presented to the Duke of Norfolk and passed down to the community of Dominican Sisters at Stone. The hand was found on an engraved silver plate on which was written 'Manus Sanctae Etheldredae DCLXXIII.' The plate itself was of a tenth-century style, suggesting that the hand had been separated from the rest of St Etheldreda's body at around the time of the tenth century. It was reported in 1876 that when the hand was found it was "perfectly entire and quite white (but) exposure to the air has now changed it to a dark brown and the skin has cracked and disappeared in several places" The modern day shrine is a relatively simple construction, displaying St Etheldreda's hand in a glass reliquary. Until the late 1960s there was a small altar dedicated to St Etheldreda, immediately in front of where the relics are displayed, but the liturgical changes which followed the
Second Vatican Council led to the altar being removed, to be replaced by the parish font in 1975, which was moved from the back of the church where it had previously been. Pilgrims continue to visit the shrine of St Etheldreda at the small Roman Catholic church, often combining it with a visit to
Ely Cathedral, where the medieval shrine was located before the Reformation. ==Footnotes==