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Her sisters, Sts. Ethelburga and Saethrid, were both
Abbesses of Faremontier in Brie, St. Withburga was a nun at Ely, and St.
Etheldreda became Abbess of Ely. Sexburga was the daughter of Anna, King of
the East Angles, and was married about 640 to Earconbert, King of Kent. She
lived with her husband for twenty-four years, and by him had two sons,
Egbert and Lothar, both successively Kings of Kent, and two daughters, both
of whom became nuns and saints: St. Earcongota, a nun of Faremontier, and
St. Ermenhild, who married Wulfhere, King of Mercia, and after his death
took the veil and became Abbess of Ely. After the death of her husband in
664, Sexburga founded the Abbey of Minster in Sheppey; after a few years
there she removed to Ely and placed herself under her sister Etheldreda,
then abbess. The "Liber Eliensis" contains the farewell speech made by
Sexburga to her nuns at Minster, and an account of her reception at Ely. St.
Etheldreda died, probably in 679, and Sexburga was elected abbess. She was
still alive and acting as abbess in 695, when she presided at the
translation of St. Etheldreda's relics to a new shrine she had erected for
her at Ely, which included a sarcophagus of white marble from the ruined
city of Grantchester. Sexburga was buried at Ely, near her sister St.
Etheldreda and her feast is kept on 6 July. There are several lives of St.
Sexburga extant. The one printed in Capgrave, "Nova, Legenda" and used by
the Bollandists seems to be taken from the Cotton manuscript (Tib. E. 1) in
the British Museum. There is another Latin life in the same collection
(Cotton MS., Calig. A. 8), but it is so damaged by fire that it is useless.
At Lambeth there are fragments of an Anglo-Saxon life (MS. 427).
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