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In 1658, an
anonymous scribe made a copy of 'an ancient triptych', which concerned
the life of the tenth-century St Walstan. This copy once belonged
to the Norfolk parish church of Bawburgh, the traditional birth
and burial site of the saint. The original medieval triptych is
lost, but the copy is written in English and now filed as Item 8
of Lambeth MSS 935 in Lambeth Palace library. Known as the Lambeth
Life, it is one of only two primary sources for the thousand year
old legend, but has a unique secondary importance in that Walstan
is declared to have been born in 'Blyborow town', rather than Bawburgh,
Norfolk.
Until 1754,
when Thomas Gardner published an historical account of Dunwich,
Blithburgh and Southwold, the matter of St Walstan's birthplace
being named as Blyborow (taken to be Blythburgh) had, for the most
part, no other documentary support. His following continued to flourish
in Norfolk, where the majority of representations or icons are to
be found and where he is still celebrated as Patron Saint of Agriculture
and Farm Workers.
Over the centuries,
few if any Suffolk chroniclers included St Walstan in their deliberations,
and it was only in 1917 that M.R. James idly suggested that the
Lambeth Life was ' ... certainly better here in saying that [Walstan]
was born at Blythburgh in Suffolk'. He gave no evidence that he
had researched the matter, or that he had seen Gardner's account.
No historical
connection can be made between the Lambeth Life and Thomas Gardner,
but it is nevertheless interesting that in his account Gardner writes
of St Andrew's Walberswick: 'The windows of St Christopher and St
Wolstane seem to have been taken from this [the old church] and
set up in the latter church, where all the Images, with the Tables
of Saint George and King Harry, accompanied them.' Gardner also
gives an extract from the churchwarden's receipts for 1487, where
an amount of 8s. 4d. is paid 'for mendying Seynt Krysteferys Wyndown'
while a lesser sum of 9d. is 'for mendying Seynt Walsteneys Wyndown'.
If 'Wolstane'
and 'Walsteney' are accepted as 'Walstan' (and further discussion
would indicate this to be the case), a better explanation needs
to be sought for why 'Blyborow' should have been named as his birthplace
in the Lambeth Life. The Walberswick dedication adds nothing to
the claim that St Walstan was born in Blythburgh, and the reference
has been largely ignored by Suffolk historians. It is clear, though,
that if the Walberswick window was moved from the old (marsh) church,
it predated 1487 and thus heightens the importance of Walstan's
inclusion at such a site.
A number of
other Suffolk pre-Reformation icons or references have now been
identified at Bury St Edmunds, Cavenham, Earl Stonham and possibly
Ashby. There is also one other possible clue that might link St
Walstan with the ancient See of Dunwich and the royal household
of King Anna. In both the Lambeth Life, and the earlier Latin Life
(first published in 1516 by Wynkyne de Worde and later by Butler
as one of his 'Lives'), Walstan is 'royal' by implication: he was
'a Kings sonne' (Lambeth Life) and of 'distinguished royal stock'
(Latin Life). Furthermore, in the Lambeth Life his mother is named
as Blythe and, in subsequent accounts, imbued additionally with
sainthood. Can this Saint, or Queen, Blythe (or Blida) be linked
to Blythburgh and Anna, King of the East Angles'
Walstan's father
is named Benedict, and while we find no King Benedict at Blythburgh,
due consideration should be given to why (a) his mother was named
Blythe, with its obvious match with the name Blythburgh and the
Blyth valley, and (b) why Blyborow Town appears in The Lambeth Life.
Further reading: Rev. Alban Butler, The Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs,
and Other principal Saints (Various editions); M.R. James, 'Lives
of St Walstan', Proceedings of the Norfolk and Norwich Archaeological
Society, 19 (1917); Miriam Gill, 'The Saint with a Scythe', Proceedings
of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History, 38 (1995);
Thomas Gardner, An Historical Account of Dunwich, Blithburgh, Southwold
with remarks on some places continuous thereto (1754); Carol Twinch,
In Search of St Walstan (Norwich, 1995); Merle Tidey, In and Around
the Village of Walberswick (1987); Tony Norton A Blyth Valley Saint
(Blyth Valley Team 'Times', July 1999).
Carol Twinch, Rendham, March 2000
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