Christina of Markyate

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Christina of Markyate was born in Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire c. 1095-1100, and died perhaps after 1155. As a young girl or adolescent she took a vow of chastity, so her subsequent parents' attempts to force her unwillingly into marriage led her to run away from home go into hiding under the care of a hermit called Roger, a monk and deacon of St Albans Abbey, who lived at Markyate, Hertfordshire. During this period of secret confinement she experienced her first visions of the Virgin Mary and Jesus Christ.

After a protracted process her husband freed her from her marital obligations, and she was able to emerge from hiding. As her reputation for holiness and her visionary gifts became widely known, a number of other women gathered around her at Markyate, which had been left to her by Roger when he died in 1121 or 1122. Her community received considerable financial support from Geoffry de Gorham or Gorron, Abbot of St Albans, and she formally professed as a nun, perhaps in about 1130 or 1131. In 1145 the land on which Markyate stood was formally handed over to the nuns by the canons of St Paul's Cathedral, London, who owned it, in exchange for a nominal rent, and her community was formally consecrated as a priory and dedicated to The Holy Trinity.

There are three important records of her life:

  • a manuscript containing an account of her life (edited by C. H. Talbot)
  • several biographical details in the chronicles of St Albans Abbey
  • the so-called St Albans Psalter, which she probably owned

She is also mentioned in two documents dated 1155 which suggest, but do not prove, that she was still alive in that year.

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