Mildrith's successor as abbess, Eadburg (also styled
Edburga of Minster-in-Thanet, a correspondent of
Saint Boniface), built a new abbey church, also at Minster-in-Thanet, dedicated to Ss Peter and Paul, and translated Mildrith's remains there not later than 748. The last abbess of Minster in Thanet was Leofruna, who was captured by Danes in 1011. The abbey was abandoned and the church downgraded to a parish church. Mildrith's remains, despite fierce local opposition, were
translated to
St Augustine's Abbey,
Canterbury in 1030, Some of her relics were given, in the 11th century, to a church at
Deventer, Netherlands. In 1881 the feast day of St Mildred was officially reinstated by
Pope Leo XIII. In 1882, following a refounding of a Benedictine monastery at Minster in Thanet, the nuns petitioned the Archbishop of Utrecht, who granted their return to Thanet. It became a private house until 1937, when it was purchased by Benedictine nuns from St Walburga's Abbey in
Eichstätt, Bavaria, as a refuge from persecution and became a dependent priory. In 1953, a relic of St Mildred was brought there. ==Family tree==