
Saint profile
St. Edmund of Abingdon
1175–1240
Associated with Healing, Children, Protection, Students; patronage includes Patron of students and philosophers.
Biography and devotion
St. Edmund of Abingdon: life, patronage, and devotion
St. Edmund of Abingdon, also called St. Edmund Rich, was born around 1175 at Abingdon in England. A scholar, priest, Archbishop of Canterbury, and reforming pastor, he is patron of students and philosophers. His life joined intellectual brilliance with discipline, chastity, pastoral courage, and conflict with royal power.
Edmund studied at Oxford and Paris and became one of the outstanding teachers of his generation. He taught the liberal arts and theology, lived simply, and was known for devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary. He made a private vow of chastity and held his learning under the judgment of prayer. Students came to him not only for instruction but for spiritual seriousness.
After priestly ordination, Edmund became treasurer of Salisbury Cathedral and a respected preacher. In 1233 he was chosen Archbishop of Canterbury. The office placed him in the difficult world of English politics, papal authority, cathedral rights, and royal interference. He tried to reform clerical life, defend ecclesiastical freedom, and guide King Henry III toward justice.
His years as archbishop were marked by frustration. Conflicts with monks of Canterbury, with royal officials, and with abuses in the Church caused him grief. Rather than surrender his conscience, he eventually left England and went to the Cistercian abbey of Pontigny in France, a place already associated with exiled archbishops of Canterbury. He later moved to Soisy and died in 1240.
Miracles were reported after his death, and he was canonized in 1246. His writings include the spiritual work Speculum Ecclesiae, often known as The Mirror of Holy Church, a text that reflects his pastoral desire for holiness rather than mere academic display. St. Edmund’s life shows that learning becomes saintly when joined to purity, courage, and willingness to suffer for the freedom of the Church.
Pontigny gave his memory a fitting home because it had already sheltered bishops who suffered for the Church’s freedom. Pilgrims came to Edmund’s shrine seeking healing, and his rapid canonization shows how strongly the faithful recognized holiness beneath his difficult public office.
At a glance
- Life dates
- 1175–1240
- Feast day
- November 16
- Patronage
- Patron of students and philosophers
Relic in the Chasing Saints collection
A relic of St. Edmund of Abingdon is present in the Chasing Saints Relic Collection. Private registry details, certificate IDs, provenance notes, and storage information are intentionally not shown publicly.
Reported favors


