Edith Forne was an English noblewoman who was the concubine of King Henry I of England and the foundress of Osney Abbey in Oxford.
She was the daughter of Forn Sigulfson, Lord of Greystoke, Cumberland.
Edith had two children by King Henry:
In 1120, Henry caused Edith to marry Robert D'Oyly the younger, second son of Nigel D'Oyly.[1] As a marriage portion, she was granted the Manor of Cleydon, Buckinghamshire. Robert and Edith had at least two children, Henry, buried at Osney in 1163,[1] and Gilbert.
In 1129, Edith persuaded her husband to build the Church of St Mary, in the Isle of Osney, near Oxford Castle, for the use of Augustine Monks - this was to become Osney Abbey.[1]. She told him that she had dreamt of the chattering of magpies, interpreted by a friar as souls in purgatory who needed a church in which to rest.
Edith was buried in Osney Abbey, in a religious habit, as John Leland describes upon seeing her tomb as it was on the eve of the dissolution: ‘Ther lyeth an image of Edith, of stone, in th' abbite of a vowess, holding a hart in her right hand, on the north side of the high altaire’. The legendary dream of magpies was painted near the tomb.