See also

Family of Sitric II + Caoch of DUBLIN and Edith + of ENGLAND

Husband: Sitric II + Caoch of DUBLIN (874-927)
Wife: Edith + of ENGLAND (910-947)
Children: Olaf + SIHTRICSSON (927-981)

Husband: Sitric II + Caoch of DUBLIN

Name: Sitric II + Caoch of DUBLIN
Sex: Male
Father: Sitric + of DUBLIN (850-896)
Mother: -
Birth 0874 Dublin, Leinster, Ireland
Death 0927 (age 52-53) Dublin, Leinster, Ireland

Wife: Edith + of ENGLAND

Name: Edith + of ENGLAND
Sex: Female
Father: Edward I * (871-924)
Mother: Aelfflaed + (878- )
Birth 0910 Wessex, England
Death 21 Jan 0947 (age 36-37)
Burial Cathedral of Mageburg, Mageburg, Germany

Child 1: Olaf + SIHTRICSSON

Name: Olaf + SIHTRICSSON
Sex: Male
Spouse: Gormflaith + of LEINSTER (950-1030)
Birth 0927 Dublin, Leinster, Ireland
Death 0981 (age 53-54) Iona, Ireland

Note on Wife: Edith + of ENGLAND

Edith of England (Old English: Eadg?ð) (910 – 26 January 946), also spelt Eadgyth or Ædgyth, was the daughter of Edward the Elder, and the wife of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor

Edith was born to the reigning English king Edward 'the Elder' by his second wife, Ælfflæd, and hence was granddaughter of Alfred the Great. Nothing is known of her until in order to seal an alliance between two Saxon kingdoms, her half-brother, King Athelstan of England, sent two of his sisters to Germany, instructing the Duke of Saxony (later Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor) to choose whichever one pleased him best. Otto chose Edith and married her in 929. The remaining sister Algiva or Adiva was married to a "king near the Jupiter mountains" (the Alps). The precise identity of the husband of this sister is debated.

 

In 936 King Henry I of Germany died and his eldest son, Eadgyth's husband, was crowned at Aachen as King Otto I. There is a surviving report of the ceremony by Widukind of Corvey which makes no mention of his wife having been crowned at this point, but according to Thietmar of Merseburg's chronicle Eadgyth was nevertheless anointed as queen, albeit in a separate ceremony. As queen, Eadgyth undertook the usual state duties of "First lady": when she turns up in the records it is generally in connection with gifts to the state's favoured monasteries or memorials to female holy women and saints. In this respect she seems to have been more diligent than her now widowed and subsequently sainted mother-in-law Queen Matilda whose own charitable activities only achieve a single recorded mention from the period of Eadgyth's time as queen. There was probably rivalry between the Benedictine Monastery of St Maurice founded at Magdeburg by Otto and Eadgyth in 937, a year after coming to the throne and Matilda's foundation at Quedlinburg Abbey, intended by her as a memorial to her husband, the late King Henry I.

 

Eadgyth accompanied her husband on his travels, though not during battles. She spent the hostilities of 939 at Lorsch Abbey

 

Like her brother, Athelstan, Edith was devoted to the cult of Saint Oswald and was instrumental in introducing this cult into Germany after her marriage to the emperor. Her lasting influence may have caused certain monasteries and churches in Saxony to be dedicated to this saint.[1]

 

Eadgyth's death at a relatively young age was unexpected.

 

[edit] ChildrenEdith and Otto's children were:

 

1.Liutgarde, married Conrad the Red

2.Liudolf, Duke of Swabia (930-September 6 957)

[edit] TombHer tomb is located in the Cathedral of Magdeburg. A lead coffin inside a stone sarcophagus with her name on it was found and opened in 2008 by archaeologists during work on the building. An inscription recorded that it was the body of Eadgyth, reburied in 1510. It was examined in 2009, then brought to Bristol, England, for tests in 2010. Professor Mark Horton of Bristol University said that "this may prove to be the oldest complete remains of an English royal." The investigations at Bristol, applying isotope tests on tooth enamel, checked whether she was born and brought up in Wessex and Mercia, as written history has indicated.[1][2] Testing on the bones revealed that they are the remains of Eadgyth, from study made of the enamel of the teeth in her upper jaw.[3] Testing of the enamel revealed that the individual entombed at Magdeburg had spent time as a youth in the chalky uplands of Wessex.[4]

 

"Tests on these isotopes can give a precise record of where the person lived up to the age of 14," noted The Times of London in its story on the testing. "In this case they showed that the woman in the casket had spent the first years of her life drinking water that came from springs on the chalk hills of southern England. This matched exactly the historical records of Eadgyth’s early life."[5]

 

The bones "are the oldest surviving remains of an English royal burial," Bristol University announced in a press release.[6]

 

Following the tests the bones were re-interred in Magdeburg Cathedral on 22 October 2010.[7]