Tuesday, 09 March 2010 A.D.
Queen Eadgyth - King Alfred's granddaughter's tomb discovered
Written by News Editor   
Wednesday, 20 January 2010 13:20
saxonqueen.jpgRemains of one of the oldest members of the English royal family, Edith of England, have been located at the Magdeburger Dom in Germany. A lead coffin was discovered, bearing the name Eadgyth, the old spelling for Edith. Inside the coffin, a nearly complete female skeleton was found, wrapped in silk.

Queen Eadgyth, the sister of King Athelstan and the granddaughter of Alfred the Great, King of Wessex became the wife of Otto I, the Holy Roman Emperor in 929. She lived in Saxony and bore Otto at least two children, before her death in 946 at the age of 36.

She was then buried at the Monastery of Mauritius in Magdeburg, Germany. Her tomb was later marked in the Cathedral by an elaborate sixteenth century monument, thought to be a cenotaph. If bones were to be found here, they would have had to been moved to this later tomb.


Full story - The Independent
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