St Edmund's remains were brought to here in 903 where a shrine was dedicated to him. Less than 50 years later another King Edmund made a major grant of land in 945 to the monastery, securing the whole area of the town within a boundary known as The Banleuca. Bury St Edmunds, as it later became known, was one of the most wealthy and influential Abbeys in England.
Added:
27th May 2005 by Diane Earl
Subjects:
Citizenship, English, History
Key Stages:
Key Stage 2, Key Stage 3
Keywords:
St Edmund, Myth, Abbey
Related Links:
EXIF data:FILE |
FileName | sukkolk_017.jpg |
FileDateTime | 0 |
FileSize | 515717 |
FileType | 2 |
MimeType | image/jpeg |
SectionsFound | ANY_TAG, IFD0, THUMBNAIL, EXIF |
COMPUTED |
html | width="960" height="1280" |
Height | 1280 |
Width | 960 |
IsColor | 1 |
ByteOrderMotorola | 1 |
Thumbnail.FileType | 2 |
Thumbnail.MimeType | image/jpeg |
IFD0 |
Orientation | 1 |
XResolution | 72/1 |
YResolution | 72/1 |
ResolutionUnit | 2 |
Software | Adobe Photoshop Elements 2.0 |
DateTime | 2005:05:25 15:29:58 |
Exif_IFD_Pointer | 164 |
THUMBNAIL |
Compression | 6 |
XResolution | 72/1 |
YResolution | 72/1 |
ResolutionUnit | 2 |
JPEGInterchangeFormat | 302 |
JPEGInterchangeFormatLength | 4315 |
EXIF |
ColorSpace | 65535 |
ExifImageWidth | 960 |
ExifImageLength | 1280 |