Edward
the Confessor was the second son of King Ethelred II and his Norman
wife, Emma. After King Ethelred's death, Emma married Canute, the son of
the Danish king who had overthrown her husband in 1017. Hardly ten
years old, Edward and his elder brother, Alfred, were sent to Normandy.
The Danes having gained the complete mastery of England, the succession,
with Emma’s consent, was settled upon Hardicanute, her son by Canute.
Upon Canute’s death in 1035, however, his illegitimate son, Harold,
taking advantage of Hardicanute’s absence in Denmark, seized the throne
for himself.
Edward and Alfred were persuaded to make an attempt
to regain the English crown, but this resulted in the cruel death of
Alfred who had fallen into Harold's hands, while Edward was obliged to
return to Normandy. Edward was only able to reclaim the throne after
Canute’s son and heir’s death in 1042. The people were eager for their
legitimate ruler to return to the throne, and Edward's accession was
received with wide acclaim.
Brought up in the ducal court of his
Norman uncle, Edward’s sympathies and loyalties always rested strongly
with the Norman people – a trait which would cause him considerable
trouble later.
Yielding to the entreaty of his nobles, he took
the powerful Earl Godwin’s daughter, Edith, for his wife in 1044. Out of
love for God and a desire for greater perfection, Edward had taken a
vow of chastity in his youth. With Edith's consent prior to their
marriage, he continued to live a life of absolute continence with her.
Edward’s
reign was a peaceful one. He was a wise and just ruler, well respected
and favored for his revocation of many exorbitant taxes. However,
conflict arose between Edward and his father-in-law, Godwin, when the
latter accused Edward of bias in his ecclesiastical nominations,
appearing to show favoritism to candidates of Norman origin and in
rejecting the election of a relative of Godwin’s to the archbishopric of
Canterbury. As tension rose to crisis level and violent friction became
imminent, Godwin and his sons’ position disintegrated due to the
unwillingness of their men to fight the King. Consequently, Edward
seized the opportunity to bring the over-mighty Earl to heel and he and
his family were banished. Within a year though, Godwin returned, and he
and the King were able to reconcile.
During his early exile in
Normandy, Edward had bound himself by vow to make a pilgrimage to St.
Peter’s tomb in Rome. However, as he could not leave his kingdom without
doing injury to his people, Pope St. Leo IX commuted its fulfillment
into the rebuilding of St. Peter’s Abbey at Westminster. The King
endowed it in a superb manner out of his own patrimony and it is to him
that we owe the magnificence of Westminster Abbey.
Edward was the
first King of England to use the “royal touch,” a form of laying on of
hands by which many suffering from diseases were cured by him.
The
saintly King was taken ill while attending the dedication of
Westminster Abbey on December 28, 1065. He died the following week on
January 5, 1066 and was buried within its walls the next day. Numerous
miracles took place at his tomb, wherein his incorrupt body was
enshrined, and he was canonized by Pope Alexander III in 1161. He is the
only saint buried in Westminster Abbey and one of the few whose relics
were not destroyed by Henry VIII.
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