
St. Margaret of Scotland
Born about
1045, died 16 Nov., 1092, was a daughter of Edward "Outremere", or "the
Exile", by Agatha, kinswoman of Gisela, the wife of St. Stephen of Hungary. She was
the granddaughter of Edmund Ironside. A constant tradition asserts that Margaret's father
and his brother Edmund were sent to Hungary for safety during the reign of Canute, but no
record of the fact has been found in that country. The date of Margaret's birth cannot be
ascertained with accuracy, but it must have been between the years 1038, when St. Stephen
died, and 1057, when her father returned to England. It appears that Margaret came with
him on that occasion and, on his death and the conquest of England by the Normans, her
mother Agatha decided to return to the Continent. A storm however drove their ship to
Scotland, where Malcolm III received the party under his protection, subsequently taking
Margaret to wife. This event had been delayed for a while by Margaret's desire to entire
religion, but it took place some time between 1067 and 1070.
In her position as queen, all Margaret's great influence
was thrown into the cause of religion and piety. A synod was held, and among the special
reforms instituted the most important were the regulation of the Lenten fast, observance
of the Easter communion, and the removal of certain abuses concerning marriage within the
prohibited degrees. Her private life was given up to constant prayer and practices of
piety. She founded several churches, including the Abbey of Dunfermline, built to enshrine
her greatest treasure, a relic of the true Cross. Her book of the Gospels, richly adorned
with jewels, which one day dropped into a river and was according to legend miraculously
recovered, is now in the Bodleian library at Oxford. She foretold the day of her death,
which took place at Edinburgh on 16 Nov., 1093, her body being buried before the high
altar at Dunfermline.
In 1250 Margaret was canonized by Innocent IV, and her
relics were translated on 19 June, 1259, to a new shrine, the base of which is still
visible beyond the modern east wall of the restored church. At the Reformation her head
passed into the possession of Mary Queen of Scots, and later was secured by the Jesuits at
Douai, where it is believed to have perished during the French Revolution. According to
George Conn, "De duplici statu religionis apud Scots" (Rome, 1628), the rest of
the relics, together with those of Malcolm, were acquired by Philip II of Spain, and
placed in two urns in the Escorial. When, however, Bishop Gillies of Edinburgh applied
through Pius IX for their restoration to Scotland, they could not be found.
Several churches are dedicated to Saint
Margaret. One of the oldest is St Margaret's Chapel in Edinburgh
Castle, which was founded by her son King David I. The chapel
was long thought to have been the oratory of Margaret herself,
but is now considered to be a 12th century establishment. The
oldest building in Edinburgh, it was restored in the 19th
century, and refurbished in the 1990s.
St. Margaret's Church (Margaretakirken)
in Maridalen near Oslo, Norway, is dedicated to Saint Margaret
of Scotland. The stone church dates from the middle of the
1200s. It is now a ruin, but after restoration in 1934 the
church today is one of the best-preserved medieval buildings in
Oslo after the Old Aker Church.
Others include the
13th-century Church of St Margaret the Queen in Buxted, East
Sussex,
and St Margaret of
Scotland, Aberdeen.
The chief authority for Margaret's life is the
contemporary biography printed in "Acta SS.", II, June, 320. Its authorship has
been ascribed to Turgot, the saint's confessor, a monk of Durham and later Archbishop of
St. Andrews, and also to Theodoric, a somewhat obscure monk; but in spite of much
controversy the point remains quite unsettled. The feast of St. Margaret is now observed
by the whole Church on 10 June.
St Margaret's Chapel can be seen at
Edinburgh Castle