According to Bede, Hilda was born in 614 into the
Deiran royal household. She was the second daughter of Hereric, nephew of
Edwin, King of Deira, and his wife, Breguswīþ. When Hilda was still an infant, her father was poisoned while in exile at the court of the
Brittonic king of
Elmet in what is now
West Yorkshire. In 616, Edwin, fighting alongside Rædwald of East Anglia with whom he sought protection, defeated
Æthelfrith, the son of
Æthelric of Bernicia, in battle. He created the
Kingdom of Northumbria and took its throne. Hilda was brought up at King Edwin's court. In 625, the widowed Edwin married the Christian princess
Æthelburh of Kent, daughter of King
Æthelberht of Kent and the
Merovingian princess
Bertha of Kent. As part of the marriage contract, Aethelburh was allowed to continue her Roman Christian worship and was accompanied to Northumbria with her chaplain,
Paulinus of York, a Roman monk sent to England in 601 to assist
Augustine of Canterbury. Augustine's mission in England was based in Kent, and is referred to as the
Gregorian mission after the pope who sent him. As queen, Æthelburh continued to practise her Christianity and no doubt influenced her husband's thinking as her mother Bertha had influenced her father. In 627, King Edwin was
baptised on
Easter Day, 12 April, along with his entire
court, which included the 13-year-old Hilda, in a small wooden church hastily constructed for the occasion near the site of the present
York Minster. In 633, Northumbria was overrun by the neighbouring pagan King of Mercia, at which time King Edwin fell in battle. Paulinus accompanied Hilda and Queen Æthelburh and her companions to the Queen's home in Kent. Queen Æthelburh founded a convent at
Lyminge and it is assumed that Hilda remained with the Queen-Abbess. Hilda's elder sister,
Hereswith, married Ethelric, brother of King
Anna of East Anglia, who with all of his daughters became renowned for their Christian virtues. Later, Hereswith became a nun at
Chelles Abbey in
Gaul (modern
France). Bede resumes Hilda's story at a point when she was about to join her widowed sister at Chelles Abbey. At the age of 33, Hilda decided instead to answer the call of Bishop
Aidan of Lindisfarne and returned to Northumbria to live as a
nun. ==Abbess==