Previous Saint This month Next Saint
[Today's previous saint] [back to Calendar] [Today's next saint]

Born at East Stowford, Devonshire, England; date unknown. Few sources mention Saint Urith, foundress of the church at Chittlehampton. She was a consecrated virgin who was killed by haymakers at the instigation of a jealous, possibly pagan, stepmother. A stream sprang out of the ground where she fell, much as in the legends of Saints Sidwell and Cyniburg. She may have been persecuted by the Saxons. The vita found at her shrine records the miracles wrought by her and is the basis for the rhyming Latin poem about her in Trinity College, Cambridge (Manuscript 0.9.38).

The offerings at her shrine were sufficient to build the tower of Chittlehampton, reputed to have been the finest in Devon. So great was her reputation for miracles that the offerings provided to the vicar were three times the income from tithes and glebe. The removal of her statue from the church in 1539-1540 led to a diminution of her cultus. The pulpit built about 1500 survives with a figure of Saint Urith holding the palm of martyrdom and the foundation of the stone church. There is a 16th-century stained-glass window of her at Nettlecombe in Somerset (Farmer).

Troparion of St Urith tone 5
O holy Virgin Martyr Urith/ who didst suffer martyrdom in a Devon village/ and didst patiently endure the jealousy of thy pagan stepmother;/ pray for the faithful/ who are today suffering persecution,/ that evil may be destroyed and that God may be glorified,/ that we may cry to thee: Rejoice, O Virgin Urith.

Icon of St. Urith
http://www.allmercifulsavior.com/icons/Icons-Urith.htm##1



Previous Saint This month Next Saint
[Today's previous saint] [back to Calendar] [Today's next saint]