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St Cissa was a converted pagan who succeeded St Guthlac. This succession was foretold by Guthlac as recounted by Saint Guthlac's biographer, Felix of Crowland:

XVIII Concerning abbess Ecgburh.

It happened also on a time that the venerable maid Ecgburh, abbess, the daughter of Aldwulf the king, sent to the venerable man Guthlac a leaden coffin, and winding-sheet thereto, and besought him by the holy name of the celestial King, that after his departure they should place his body therein. She sent the message by a brother of worthy life, and bid him ask him, who should be the keeper of the place after him. When he had kindly received the message of the venerable maid, then concerning that which he was asked - who should be the keeper of the place after him, - he answered and said, that the man was of heathen race, and was not yet baptised; but notwithstanding, that he should soon come, and should receive the rites of baptism. And so it came to pass ; for the same Cissa, who afterwards held the place, came to Britain a little time afterwards, and they baptised him there, as the man of God foretold.

The complete text of the Anglo-Saxon version of Felix's Life of St Guthlac can be downloaded at google books. Cissa acted as one of the biographer's sources.

http://tinyurl.com/3lzx69

Cissa is also mentioned in the account of a later ecclesiastical historian of Crowland:

There were also at that time in the same island, some living the life of hermits, who, cleaving with holy intimacy to the man of God, as long as he lived, as the weak cling to the physician, kept their souls continually in a healthy state by means of his instruction and example. One of these, Cissa by name, was a recent convert to the catholic faith. He was a man of noble birth, and formerly exercised great influence inworldly affairs; but he left all and followed his Lord Christ.

The History of Ingulf in Joseph Stevenson, The Church Historians of England, Vol 2 (London, 1854), p.572. This work can also be downloaded from google books:

http://tinyurl.com/3k8cfv

Ingulf's history goes on to describe on p.598 that Cissa's tomb was one of those adjoining his holy master Guthlac's which was destroyed by the Danes. Thacker and Sharpe in their book, Local Saints and Local Churches in the Early Medieval West, (Oxford, 2002), p.521 say that Cissa's relics now rest at Thorney Abbey in Cambridgeshire, presumably translated there by Bishop AEthelwold.



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