Cult at Bury St Edmunds Edmund's
cult was promoted and flourished, but it declined, with the production of St Edmund coins ceasing after around 910. The saint did not reappear in
liturgical calendars from the 9th century until the appearance of Abbo of Fleury's
Passio Sancti Eadmundi three centuries later. In 1010, Edmund's remains were translated to London to protect them from the Vikings, where they were kept for three years before being returned to Bury. The Danish king
Canute, who ruled England from 1016, converted to Christianity and was instrumental in founding the abbey at Bury St Edmunds. The new stone
abbey church was completed in 1032, having possibly been commissioned by Canute in time to be consecrated on the 16th anniversary of the
Battle of Assandun, which took place on 18 October 1016. Edmund's shrine became one of the most famous and wealthy
pilgrimage locations in England. The abbey's power grew upon being given jurisdiction over the western half of the county of
Suffolk by the creation in 1044 of the
Liberty of Saint Edmund, established by
Edward the Confessor, and a larger church was built in 1095, into which Edmund's
relics were translated. After the
Norman Conquest of England in 1066, the
abbot planned out over 300 new houses within a
grid-iron pattern at a location that was close to the abbey precincts, a development which caused the town to more than double in size.
King John is said to have given a great
sapphire and a precious stone set in gold to the shrine, which he was permitted to keep upon the condition that it was returned to the abbey when he died. Edmund's shrine was destroyed in 1539, during the
dissolution of the monasteries. According to a letter (now in the
British Library's
Cotton Collection), the shrine was defaced, and silver and gold to the value of over 5,000
marks was taken away. The abbot and his monks were expelled and the abbey was dissolved.
Cult at Toulouse In 1664, a lawyer from the French city of
Toulouse publicized a claim that Edmund's remains had been taken from Bury by the future
Louis VIII of France following his defeat at the
Battle of Lincoln in 1217. The relics had then been donated by Louis to the
Basilica of Saint-Sernin, Toulouse. The first record of this is a relic list for Saint-Sernin of around 1425, which included St Edmund among the church's relics. In 1644, after the city was saved from the
plague from 1628 to 1631, which the population ascribed to the intercession of a saint known to the church authorities as
Aymundus, who they decided was Edmund. In gratitude for its deliverance, the city vowed to build a new
reliquary for the saint's remains. Edmund's cult flourished there for over two centuries. The reliquary, designed by
Jean Chalette, was silver and adorned with solid silver statues. In 1644, the relics were verified and catalogued for interment in the newly-completed shrine, by which time the cult's origins had been forgotten. Edmund's shrine was removed in 1794 during the
French Revolution. The saint's relics were restored to the Basilica of Saint-Sernin in 1845 and placed in a new reliquary.
Relics at Arundel in
West Sussex In 1901 the
Archbishop of Westminster,
Herbert Vaughan, received "certain relics" from the Basilica of Saint-Sernin. The relics, believed at the time to be those of St Edmund, were intended for the high altar of London's
Westminster Cathedral, which was then under construction. The acceptance of the relics required the intercession of
Pope Leo XIII, after an initial refusal by the church in France. Upon their arrival in England they were housed in the
Fitzalan Chapel at
Arundel Castle prior to their translation to Westminster. Although their validity had been confirmed in 1874, when two pieces were given to
Edward Manning, Archbishop of Westminster, concerns were raised about the authenticity of the Arundel relics by
Montague James and Charles Biggs in
The Times. The relics remained at Arundel under the care of the
Duke of Norfolk while a historical commission was set up by Cardinal Vaughan and Archbishop Germain of Saint-Sernin. They remain at Arundel. In 1966 three teeth from the collection of relics from France were given to
Douai Abbey in
Berkshire.
Commemoration and attributes , Suffolk, marking the location of an ancient oak tree, supposed to be the site of Edmund's death. The
feast day of Edmund, King and Martyr in the Catholic Church is 20 November. He is also remembered in the
Church of England, with a
Lesser Festival on this day of the year. Edmund's particular attributes are the arrow and the sword, being an English king, his attributes include the
orb and
sceptre. According to the
Oxford Dictionary of Saints, his attribute can also be a wolf. A stone cross at
Hoxne in Suffolk marks one supposed location of Edmund's death. The monument records that it was built on the site of an ancient oak tree which fell in 1848 and was found to have an arrow head embedded in its trunk. Some fifty-five
Church of England parish churches are dedicated to Edmund, perhaps the most notable being the Church of
St Edmund, King and Martyr,
Lombard Street in the
City of London. The
Benedictine community of Douai Abbey also has Edmund as its patron. There is a St Edmund's chapel at the East end of
Tewkesbury Abbey == Medieval hagiographies and legends ==