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Saint Winifred

Saint Winifred (or Winefride; Welsh: Gwenffrewi; Latin: Wenefreda, Winifreda) was a Welsh virgin martyr of the 7th century. Her story was celebrated as early as the 8th century, but became popular in England in the 12th, when her hagiography was first written down.


Winifred or Winefride
Stained glass depiction of Winifred, designed by William Burges, at Castell Coch, Cardiff
Virgin, Martyr & Abbess
BornTegeingl (modern-day Flintshire)
Diedc. 7th century
Gwytherin (in modern-day Conwy)
Venerated in
Major shrineShrewsbury Abbey, now destroyed although a small part of the shrine base survives. Holywell, fully active holy well and well-house shrine.
Feast3 November
AttributesAbbess, holding a sword, sometimes with her head under her arm
PatronageHolywell; against unwanted advances

A healing spring at the traditional site of her decapitation and restoration is now a shrine and pilgrimage site called St Winefride's Well in Holywell, Flintshire, Wales and known as "the Lourdes of Wales".

Life and legend

 
Stained glass window depicting the martyrdom of Winefride (by Margaret Agnes Rope, west window, Shrewsbury Cathedral, 1910)

The oldest accounts of Winifred's life date to the 12th century.[1] According to legend, Winifred was the daughter of a chieftain of Tegeingl,[2] Welsh nobleman Tyfid ap Eiludd. Her mother was Wenlo, a sister of Saint Beuno, and a member of a family closely connected with the kings of south Wales.[3]

According to legend, her suitor, Caradog, was enraged when she decided to become a nun and decapitated her. A healing spring appeared where her head fell.[4] Winifred's head was subsequently rejoined to her body due to the efforts of Beuno, and she was restored to life. Seeing the murderer leaning on his sword with an insolent and defiant air, Beuno invoked the chastisement of heaven, and Caradog fell dead on the spot, the popular belief being that the ground opened and swallowed him. Beuno left Holywell, and returned to Caernarfon; before he left, the tradition is that he seated himself upon a stone, which now stands in the outer well pool, and there promised in the name of God "that whosoever on that spot should thrice ask for a benefit from God in the name of St. Winefride would obtain the grace he asked if it was for the good of his soul."[3]

After eight years spent at Holywell, Winifred received an inspiration to leave the convent and retire inland. Accordingly, Winifred went upon her pilgrimage to seek for a place of rest. Ultimately she arrived at Gwytherin near the source of the River Elwy.[3] She later became a nun and abbess at Gwytherin in Denbighshire.[4] More elaborate versions of this tale relate many details of her life, including Winefride's pilgrimage to Rome.

Given the late date of the earliest surviving written accounts of Winifred's life, her existence has been doubted since the 19th century. She is not recorded in any Welsh pedigree of saints nor in the 13th-century calendar of Welsh saints.[5] There is, however, evidence of her cult from centuries before the appearance of her first hagiography. Two small pieces of an oak reliquary from the 8th century were discovered in 1991 and identified based on earlier drawings as belonging to the Arch Gwenfrewi, the reliquary of Winifred.[6] The reliquary probably contained an article of clothing or another object associated with the saint, but not her bones. According to historian Lynne Heidi Stumpe, the reliquary provides "good evidence for her having been recognized as a saint very soon after her death",[7] and thus of her historicity.[8] The reliquary may even be "the earliest surviving testimony to the formal cultus of any Welsh saint".[9]

Veneration

Veneration of Winifred as a martyr saint is attested from the 12th century. She is mostly venerated in England, not in Wales, which led Caesar Baronius to list her as an "English saint" in his Roman Martyrology of 1584.

In 1138, relics of Winifred were carried to Shrewsbury to form the basis of an elaborate shrine.[10] The Church of St. Winifred, Stainton is a 12th century church located in the village of Stainton, South Yorkshire, England.[11]

Cult

 
Part of the prologue of a life of St Winifred by Robert of Shrewsbury (Bodleian Mss. Laud c.94.)

The details of Winifred's life are gathered from a manuscript in the British Museum, said to have been the work of the British monk, Elerius, a contemporary of the saint, and also from a manuscript life in the Bodleian Library, generally believed to have been compiled in 1130 by Robert, prior of Shrewsbury (d. 1168).[3] Prior Robert is generally credited with greatly promoting the cult of St. Winifred by translating her relics from Gwytherin to Shrewsbury Abbey and writing the most influential life of the saint.[12][13] The chronicler John of Tynemouth also wrote of Winifred.

To further enhance the prestige of the Abbey, Abbot Nicholas Stevens built a new shrine for St. Winifred in the 14th century, before then having some monks steal the relics of St. Beuno from Rhewl and installed in the abbey church. Although the abbey was fined, it was allowed to keep the relics.[14]

William Caxton's 1483 edition of the Golden Legend includes the story of St. Winifred. The following year, he printed a separate "Life" of the saint.

 
St Winefride's Well in Holywell, one of the oldest continually visited pilgrimage sites in Britain

The shrine and well at Shrewsbury became major pilgrimage goals in the Late Middle Ages, but the shrine was destroyed by Henry VIII in 1540.

The well at Holywell, originally formed from a mountain spring, is housed below the town on the side of a steep hill. The shrine of St. Winifride (known as Gwenffrwd or Gwenfrewi in Welsh) is regarded as one of the finest surviving examples of a medieval holy well in Britain.[citation needed] The well precinct also houses an 'Interpretive Exhibition', setting forth the story of the saint and her shrine in detail; the Victorian former custodians' house has also been converted to house a museum of the pilgrimage.[15]

 
St Winifred's Well, a 14th-century former well chapel, Woolston, Shropshire

Another well named after St. Winifred is found in the hamlet of Woolston near Oswestry in Shropshire. According to legend, it is thought that on her way to Shrewsbury Abbey, Winifred's body was laid there overnight and a spring sprang up out of the ground. The water is supposed to have healing powers and be good at healing bruises, wounds and broken bones.[citation needed] The well is covered by a 15th-century half-timbered cottage. The water flows through a series of stone troughs and into a large pond, which then flows into a stream. The cottage is maintained by the Landmark Trust.[16]

Another spring supposedly arising from the laying down of Winifred's body is at Holywell Farm, midway between Tattenhall and Clutton, Cheshire. There is a spring in the garden of this non-working farm which supplies two houses with their drinking water.[citation needed]

A spring on Lansdown Hill, Bath was known as St. Winifred's Spring, and gave its name to nearby Winifreds Lane. There appears to be no known connection to the life of the saint, but its waters were once supposed to help women conceive.[17][18]

A Norman church dedicated to St. Winifred can be found in the village of Branscombe, Devon. There is some archaeological evidence to suggest an earlier Saxon church may have occupied the site.[citation needed]

Roman Martyrology

In the 2004 edition of the Roman Martyrology, Winifred is listed under 2 November with the Latin name Winefrídae. She is listed as follows: "At the spring located at Holywell in Wales, St Winefride the Virgin, who is outstanding in her witness as a nun".[19] Winifred is officially recognised by the Vatican as a person with a historical basis, who lived an exemplary religious life, but with no discussion of miracles which she may have performed or been healed by. As a 1st-millennium saint, she is recognised as a saint by popular acclaim, rather than ever being formally canonized.

In the current Roman Catholic liturgical calendar for Wales,[20] Winifred is commemorated on 3 November, since 2 November is designated as All Souls' Day.

Iconography

Winifred's representation in stained glass at Llandyrnog and Llanasa focuses on her learning and her status as an honorary martyr, but the third aspect of her life, her religious leadership, is also commemorated visually. On the seal of the cathedral chapter of St. Asaph (now in the National Museums and Galleries of Wales, Cathays Park, Cardiff), she appears wimpled as an abbess, bearing a crozier, symbol of leadership and authority and a reliquary.[2]

References in fiction

St. Winifred's Well, termed "þe Holy Hede", is mentioned in the medieval poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (in Passus II). She also appears as a character in the 2021 film adaptation of the poem, portrayed by actress Erin Kellyman.[21]

William Rowley's 17th-century comedy A Shoemaker a Gentleman dramatises St. Winifred's story, based on the version in Thomas Deloney's story The Gentle Craft (1584).

English poet Gerard Manley Hopkins memorialised St. Winifred in his unfinished drama, St Winifred's Well.

The moving of Winifred's bones to Shrewsbury is fictionalised in A Morbid Taste for Bones, the first of Ellis Peters' Brother Cadfael novels, with the plot twist that her bones are secretly left in Wales, and someone else is put into the shrine; St. Winifred is portrayed as an important character in all the books in the Brother Cadfael series. The celebration of her Feast Day provides the setting for two of the novels, The Rose Rent and The Pilgrim of Hate. The casket is stolen from its shrine in The Holy Thief, and the campaign to find and restore it propels the action. Throughout the series, the protagonist, Brother Cadfael - a Welsh monk at the English monastery at Shrewsbury - develops a "special understanding" with the saint, whom he affectionately calls "The Girl".

Australian novelist Gerald Murnane makes reference to St. Winifred in his novel Inland.

St. Winifred appears as a spirit to Sir Gawain in the 2021 movie The Green Knight. Winifred asks Sir Gawain to retrieve her severed head from a spring, which he does. He places the head in her bed with the rest of her skeletal remains, and she provides him with information regarding the identity of the Green Knight.

Legacy

A statue of St. Winifred stands overlooking the Hudson River in Hudson, New York.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Paul Burns, Butler's Saint for the Day (2007), p. 511.
  2. ^ a b "St. Winifred", The Cistercian Way 27 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b c d   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Chandlery, Peter. "St. Winefride." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 15. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912. 14 May 2013
  4. ^ a b Rees, Rice (1836). "Legend of Gwenfrewi or St. Winefred". An Essay on the Welsh Saints. London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman, Rees. pp. 295–297.
  5. ^ Sally Hallmark (2015), Gwenfrewy the Guiding Star of Gwytherin: From Maiden and Martyr to Abbess and Saint – The Cult of Gwenfrewy at Gwytherin, MA thesis (University of Wales), p. 20.
  6. ^ Arch Gwenfrewi, People's Collection Wales.
  7. ^ Lynne Heidi Stumpe (1994), "Display and Veneration of Holy Relics at St Winefride's Well and Stonyhurst", Journal of Museum Ethnography, No. 22, p. 67.
  8. ^ Roy Fry and Tristan Gray Hulse (1994), , Source – the Holy Wells Journal, Issue 1. Archived from Source Archive Online.
  9. ^ Janet Bord (1994), "St Winefride's Well, Holywell, Clwyd", Folklore, 105(1–2), p. 100.
  10. ^ Cormack, Margaret (2007). Saints and their cults in the Atlantic world. Columbia, S.C: University of South Carolina Press. pp. 204–206. ISBN 978-1-57003-630-9.
  11. ^ Historic England. "Church of St Winifred (1286289)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 19 November 2018.
  12. ^ Robert [Prior of Shrewsbury], Falconer, John (trans.), Baes, Martin (engr.) (1635). The Admirable life of Saint Wenefride virgin, martyr, abbesse. Written in Latin about 500 yeares ago, by Robert, monke and priour of Shrewsbury, of the Ven. Order of S Benedict. Devided into two books. And now translated into English, out of a very ancient and authenticall manuscript, for the edification and comfort of Catholikes. By I.F. of the Society of Jesus. [Saint-Omer : printed by the English College Press].
  13. ^   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Owen, Hugh and Blakeway, John Brickdale. A History of Shrewsbury, vol. 2, London. Harding Leppard. 1825
  14. ^ Angold, M J, et al. "Houses of Benedictine monks: Abbey of Shrewsbury." A History of the County of Shropshire, Volume 2. Eds. A T Gaydon, and R B Pugh. London: Victoria County History, 1973. 30-37. British History Online
  15. ^ St. Winifride's Well, Holywell, Flintshire
  16. ^ "St Winifred's Well". Landmark Trust. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  17. ^ "Historical and Archaeological Building Report on Somerset Place, Sion Hill, Bath" (PDF). B&NES Council. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  18. ^ Fry, Roy; Gray Hulse, Tristan. "The Other St Winifred's Wells". Source: the Holy Wells Journal, n.s. 1, Autumn 1994. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  19. ^ Martyrologium Romanum, 2004, Vatican Press (Typis Vaticanis), page 603.
  20. ^ National Calendar for Wales, accessed 6 February 2012
  21. ^ Desta, Yohana (30 July 2021). "The Green Knight: Who Is Winifred, the Beheaded Ghost?". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 23 August 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Winefride". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Further reading

  • Rees, William Jenkins, ed. (1853). "Life of St. Winefred". Lives of the Cambro-British Saints. Llandovery: William Rees. pp. 515–529.

External links

  • Holywell website
  • Holywell Church website
  • BBC Wales: Holywell
  • "Winifred, Saint" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
  • Seguin, Colleen M. (Summer 2003): , North American Journal of Welsh Studies, Vol. 3, 2

saint, winifred, winefride, welsh, gwenffrewi, latin, wenefreda, winifreda, welsh, virgin, martyr, century, story, celebrated, early, century, became, popular, england, 12th, when, hagiography, first, written, down, saintwinifred, winefridestained, glass, depi. Saint Winifred or Winefride Welsh Gwenffrewi Latin Wenefreda Winifreda was a Welsh virgin martyr of the 7th century Her story was celebrated as early as the 8th century but became popular in England in the 12th when her hagiography was first written down SaintWinifred or WinefrideStained glass depiction of Winifred designed by William Burges at Castell Coch CardiffVirgin Martyr amp AbbessBornTegeingl modern day Flintshire Diedc 7th centuryGwytherin in modern day Conwy Venerated inAnglican CommunionEastern Orthodox ChurchRoman Catholic ChurchMajor shrineShrewsbury Abbey now destroyed although a small part of the shrine base survives Holywell fully active holy well and well house shrine Feast3 NovemberAttributesAbbess holding a sword sometimes with her head under her armPatronageHolywell against unwanted advancesA healing spring at the traditional site of her decapitation and restoration is now a shrine and pilgrimage site called St Winefride s Well in Holywell Flintshire Wales and known as the Lourdes of Wales Contents 1 Life and legend 2 Veneration 2 1 Cult 2 2 Roman Martyrology 2 3 Iconography 3 References in fiction 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife and legend Edit Stained glass window depicting the martyrdom of Winefride by Margaret Agnes Rope west window Shrewsbury Cathedral 1910 The oldest accounts of Winifred s life date to the 12th century 1 According to legend Winifred was the daughter of a chieftain of Tegeingl 2 Welsh nobleman Tyfid ap Eiludd Her mother was Wenlo a sister of Saint Beuno and a member of a family closely connected with the kings of south Wales 3 According to legend her suitor Caradog was enraged when she decided to become a nun and decapitated her A healing spring appeared where her head fell 4 Winifred s head was subsequently rejoined to her body due to the efforts of Beuno and she was restored to life Seeing the murderer leaning on his sword with an insolent and defiant air Beuno invoked the chastisement of heaven and Caradog fell dead on the spot the popular belief being that the ground opened and swallowed him Beuno left Holywell and returned to Caernarfon before he left the tradition is that he seated himself upon a stone which now stands in the outer well pool and there promised in the name of God that whosoever on that spot should thrice ask for a benefit from God in the name of St Winefride would obtain the grace he asked if it was for the good of his soul 3 After eight years spent at Holywell Winifred received an inspiration to leave the convent and retire inland Accordingly Winifred went upon her pilgrimage to seek for a place of rest Ultimately she arrived at Gwytherin near the source of the River Elwy 3 She later became a nun and abbess at Gwytherin in Denbighshire 4 More elaborate versions of this tale relate many details of her life including Winefride s pilgrimage to Rome Given the late date of the earliest surviving written accounts of Winifred s life her existence has been doubted since the 19th century She is not recorded in any Welsh pedigree of saints nor in the 13th century calendar of Welsh saints 5 There is however evidence of her cult from centuries before the appearance of her first hagiography Two small pieces of an oak reliquary from the 8th century were discovered in 1991 and identified based on earlier drawings as belonging to the Arch Gwenfrewi the reliquary of Winifred 6 The reliquary probably contained an article of clothing or another object associated with the saint but not her bones According to historian Lynne Heidi Stumpe the reliquary provides good evidence for her having been recognized as a saint very soon after her death 7 and thus of her historicity 8 The reliquary may even be the earliest surviving testimony to the formal cultus of any Welsh saint 9 Veneration EditVeneration of Winifred as a martyr saint is attested from the 12th century She is mostly venerated in England not in Wales which led Caesar Baronius to list her as an English saint in his Roman Martyrology of 1584 In 1138 relics of Winifred were carried to Shrewsbury to form the basis of an elaborate shrine 10 The Church of St Winifred Stainton is a 12th century church located in the village of Stainton South Yorkshire England 11 Cult Edit Part of the prologue of a life of St Winifred by Robert of Shrewsbury Bodleian Mss Laud c 94 The details of Winifred s life are gathered from a manuscript in the British Museum said to have been the work of the British monk Elerius a contemporary of the saint and also from a manuscript life in the Bodleian Library generally believed to have been compiled in 1130 by Robert prior of Shrewsbury d 1168 3 Prior Robert is generally credited with greatly promoting the cult of St Winifred by translating her relics from Gwytherin to Shrewsbury Abbey and writing the most influential life of the saint 12 13 The chronicler John of Tynemouth also wrote of Winifred To further enhance the prestige of the Abbey Abbot Nicholas Stevens built a new shrine for St Winifred in the 14th century before then having some monks steal the relics of St Beuno from Rhewl and installed in the abbey church Although the abbey was fined it was allowed to keep the relics 14 William Caxton s 1483 edition of the Golden Legend includes the story of St Winifred The following year he printed a separate Life of the saint St Winefride s Well in Holywell one of the oldest continually visited pilgrimage sites in Britain The shrine and well at Shrewsbury became major pilgrimage goals in the Late Middle Ages but the shrine was destroyed by Henry VIII in 1540 The well at Holywell originally formed from a mountain spring is housed below the town on the side of a steep hill The shrine of St Winifride known as Gwenffrwd or Gwenfrewi in Welsh is regarded as one of the finest surviving examples of a medieval holy well in Britain citation needed The well precinct also houses an Interpretive Exhibition setting forth the story of the saint and her shrine in detail the Victorian former custodians house has also been converted to house a museum of the pilgrimage 15 St Winifred s Well a 14th century former well chapel Woolston Shropshire Another well named after St Winifred is found in the hamlet of Woolston near Oswestry in Shropshire According to legend it is thought that on her way to Shrewsbury Abbey Winifred s body was laid there overnight and a spring sprang up out of the ground The water is supposed to have healing powers and be good at healing bruises wounds and broken bones citation needed The well is covered by a 15th century half timbered cottage The water flows through a series of stone troughs and into a large pond which then flows into a stream The cottage is maintained by the Landmark Trust 16 Another spring supposedly arising from the laying down of Winifred s body is at Holywell Farm midway between Tattenhall and Clutton Cheshire There is a spring in the garden of this non working farm which supplies two houses with their drinking water citation needed A spring on Lansdown Hill Bath was known as St Winifred s Spring and gave its name to nearby Winifreds Lane There appears to be no known connection to the life of the saint but its waters were once supposed to help women conceive 17 18 A Norman church dedicated to St Winifred can be found in the village of Branscombe Devon There is some archaeological evidence to suggest an earlier Saxon church may have occupied the site citation needed Roman Martyrology Edit In the 2004 edition of the Roman Martyrology Winifred is listed under 2 November with the Latin name Winefridae She is listed as follows At the spring located at Holywell in Wales St Winefride the Virgin who is outstanding in her witness as a nun 19 Winifred is officially recognised by the Vatican as a person with a historical basis who lived an exemplary religious life but with no discussion of miracles which she may have performed or been healed by As a 1st millennium saint she is recognised as a saint by popular acclaim rather than ever being formally canonized In the current Roman Catholic liturgical calendar for Wales 20 Winifred is commemorated on 3 November since 2 November is designated as All Souls Day Iconography Edit Winifred s representation in stained glass at Llandyrnog and Llanasa focuses on her learning and her status as an honorary martyr but the third aspect of her life her religious leadership is also commemorated visually On the seal of the cathedral chapter of St Asaph now in the National Museums and Galleries of Wales Cathays Park Cardiff she appears wimpled as an abbess bearing a crozier symbol of leadership and authority and a reliquary 2 References in fiction EditSt Winifred s Well termed the Holy Hede is mentioned in the medieval poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight in Passus II She also appears as a character in the 2021 film adaptation of the poem portrayed by actress Erin Kellyman 21 William Rowley s 17th century comedy A Shoemaker a Gentleman dramatises St Winifred s story based on the version in Thomas Deloney s story The Gentle Craft 1584 English poet Gerard Manley Hopkins memorialised St Winifred in his unfinished drama St Winifred s Well The moving of Winifred s bones to Shrewsbury is fictionalised in A Morbid Taste for Bones the first of Ellis Peters Brother Cadfael novels with the plot twist that her bones are secretly left in Wales and someone else is put into the shrine St Winifred is portrayed as an important character in all the books in the Brother Cadfael series The celebration of her Feast Day provides the setting for two of the novels The Rose Rent and The Pilgrim of Hate The casket is stolen from its shrine in The Holy Thief and the campaign to find and restore it propels the action Throughout the series the protagonist Brother Cadfael a Welsh monk at the English monastery at Shrewsbury develops a special understanding with the saint whom he affectionately calls The Girl Australian novelist Gerald Murnane makes reference to St Winifred in his novel Inland St Winifred appears as a spirit to Sir Gawain in the 2021 movie The Green Knight Winifred asks Sir Gawain to retrieve her severed head from a spring which he does He places the head in her bed with the rest of her skeletal remains and she provides him with information regarding the identity of the Green Knight Legacy EditA statue of St Winifred stands overlooking the Hudson River in Hudson New York See also EditOur Lady of Loreto and St Winefride s KewNotes Edit Paul Burns Butler s Saint for the Day 2007 p 511 a b St Winifred The Cistercian Way Archived 27 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine a b c d This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Chandlery Peter St Winefride The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 15 New York Robert Appleton Company 1912 14 May 2013 a b Rees Rice 1836 Legend of Gwenfrewi or St Winefred An Essay on the Welsh Saints London Longman Rees Orme Brown Green and Longman Rees pp 295 297 Sally Hallmark 2015 Gwenfrewy the Guiding Star of Gwytherin From Maiden and Martyr to Abbess and Saint The Cult of Gwenfrewy at Gwytherin MA thesis University of Wales p 20 Arch Gwenfrewi People s Collection Wales Lynne Heidi Stumpe 1994 Display and Veneration of Holy Relics at St Winefride s Well and Stonyhurst Journal of Museum Ethnography No 22 p 67 Roy Fry and Tristan Gray Hulse 1994 Holywell Clwyd Source the Holy Wells Journal Issue 1 Archived from Source Archive Online Janet Bord 1994 St Winefride s Well Holywell Clwyd Folklore 105 1 2 p 100 Cormack Margaret 2007 Saints and their cults in the Atlantic world Columbia S C University of South Carolina Press pp 204 206 ISBN 978 1 57003 630 9 Historic England Church of St Winifred 1286289 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 19 November 2018 Robert Prior of Shrewsbury Falconer John trans Baes Martin engr 1635 The Admirable life of Saint Wenefride virgin martyr abbesse Written in Latin about 500 yeares ago by Robert monke and priour of Shrewsbury of the Ven Order of S Benedict Devided into two books And now translated into English out of a very ancient and authenticall manuscript for the edification and comfort of Catholikes By I F of the Society of Jesus Saint Omer printed by the English College Press This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Owen Hugh and Blakeway John Brickdale A History of Shrewsbury vol 2 London Harding Leppard 1825 Angold M J et al Houses of Benedictine monks Abbey of Shrewsbury A History of the County of Shropshire Volume 2 Eds A T Gaydon and R B Pugh London Victoria County History 1973 30 37 British History Online St Winifride s Well Holywell Flintshire St Winifred s Well Landmark Trust Retrieved 9 November 2015 Historical and Archaeological Building Report on Somerset Place Sion Hill Bath PDF B amp NES Council Retrieved 13 October 2014 Fry Roy Gray Hulse Tristan The Other St Winifred s Wells Source the Holy Wells Journal n s 1 Autumn 1994 Retrieved 13 October 2014 Martyrologium Romanum 2004 Vatican Press Typis Vaticanis page 603 National Calendar for Wales accessed 6 February 2012 Desta Yohana 30 July 2021 The Green Knight Who Is Winifred the Beheaded Ghost Vanity Fair Retrieved 23 August 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 St Winefride Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Further reading EditRees William Jenkins ed 1853 Life of St Winefred Lives of the Cambro British Saints Llandovery William Rees pp 515 529 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Winefride Holywell website Holywell Church website BBC Wales Holywell Winifred Saint New International Encyclopedia 1905 Seguin Colleen M Summer 2003 Cures and Controversy in Early Modern Wales The Struggle to Control St Winifred s Well North American Journal of Welsh Studies Vol 3 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint Winifred amp oldid 1124799105, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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