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Saint Wite

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Saint Wite

Saint Wite (pronounced Wee-ta) was a 9th-century Saxon holy woman from Dorset who was killed by marauding Danes. She is venerated in the Orthodox Church, is the patron saint of Dorset and her feast day is on 1 June, also celebrated as Dorset Day.

The chroniclers William of Worcester and John Gerard recorded the history of Saint Wite in the 15th and 16th centuries. Thomas More recorded the custom of offering cakes or cheese to the saint on her feast day.

Local oral tradition recounts that Saint Wite lived as a hermit on secluded cliffs in prayer and solitude. She maintained fires as beacons to guide sailors. She was killed by Danish Vikings during a 9th-century raid on Charmouth, which corroborates with a landing at Charmouth of around 15,000 Vikings and the battle of Chardown Hill in 831AD.

Wite is an Old English word with no Latin connections.

Other theories have suggested that Saint Wite was actually the 4th century martyr Saint Candida who was killed in Carthage or the 6th-century Breton Saint Gwen Teirbron. Sabine Baring-Gould suggested that she was the fifth-century Breton Saint Blanche.

The shrine containing her relics is located in the north transept of the parish Church of St Candida and Holy Cross in Whitchurch Canonicorum, in the Marshwood Vale between Bridport and Lyme Regis, Dorset.

During the medieval period, her shrine became one of England's most visited pilgrimage sites. The 13th century base of the limestone and marble shrine has three oval openings into which were placed diseased limbs or articles belonging to the sick. They would then pray for her intercession. There were separate openings in the outside wall for people afflicted with leprosy.

Her shrine escaped desecration during the 16th century Reformation in England, which prohibited the veneration of saints. Holy Cross and St. Candida Church is one of two churches in England that still holds the bones of a saint, the other survivor is that of the King and Saint Edward the Confessor in Westminster Abbey, London.

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