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St Edmund - 'England’s Saint'



St Edmunds standard – light Blue and Gold – classic English (indeed Saxon) colours as are Red and Gold or White.


Edmund was a true Germanic King in England. Born in 841 AD he died a gruesome martyrs death on 20 November 869 AD. He was a King of East Anglia. He succeeded Æthelweard to the East Anglian throne in 855 AD, while still a boy. The earliest and most reliable accounts represent Edmund as descended from the preceding kings of East Anglia of the Wuffing line. Other accounts state that his father was King Æthelweard and Galfridus de Fontibus recorded that Edmund was the youngest son of Alcmund, and that he was born in what is now Nuremburg in Old Saxony. Edmund was said to have been crowned by Bishop Humbert of Elmham on Christmas Day 855. Unfortunately he reigned during the time of the Viking wars in England. In 869/70 Edmund was defeated in battle by the Viking Great Heathen Army, which had invaded England. He was captured, tied to a tree and shot with arrows then ‘Blood Eagled’ by the Vikings, and died the death of an English martyr. Historically he died at Hoxne in Suffolk or possibly Dernford in Cambridgeshire in eastern England. His successor was Oswald and/or Æthelred. The Vikings were eventually defeated by Alfred the Great. Edmund is venerated as a saint and a martyr in the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Roman Catholic Church, and the Anglican Communion. The King's body was ultimately interred at Beadoriceworth, the modern Bury St Edmunds during the reign of theEnglish King Athelstan 924 AD to 939 AD . A banner of St. Edmund's arms was carried at the battle of Agincourt, an English victory over the French.



St Edmund. It must not be forgotten that St Edmund began as a warrior King in the great traditions of the English.


His feast day in the Orthodox, Roman, and Anglican traditions is 20 November. Many in England state that he is the true Saint of England. Others that he stands alongside St George. Both have had their banners carried in battle above the English.




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