Born in Mercia, England; died in Rome, Italy, c. 719. Saint Pega, the
virgin sister of Saint Guthlac of Croyland, had her hermitage in the
Fens (Peakirk = Pega's church in Northhamptonshire) near that of her
brother. When he realised that his death was near (714), he invited her
to his funeral. In order to get there, Pega is said to have sailed down
the Welland, and cured a blind man from Wisbech en route. Guthlac
bequeathed to her his psalter and scourge, both of which she gave to the
monastery that grew up around his hermitage. After Guthlac's death, she
is said to have made a pilgrimage to Rome and to have died there.
Ordericus Vitalis claimed that her relics survived in an unnamed Roman
church in his day and that miracles occurred there
(
Attwater2,
Benedictines,
Colgrave,
Farmer).