Relindis of Maaseik

Harlinde & Relinde murals, St. Paul's Cathedral, Liège, Belgium.

Saint Relindis (or Renule) (died 750), sister of Saint Herlindis, was the daughter of count Adelard. The sisters were brought up at the Benedictine monastery in Valenciennes.[1] Adelard and his wife later built a monastery at Maaseik for their daughters.[2] The Abbey of Aldeneik was consecrated in 728.

Willibrord consecrated Harlindis as the first abbess, After her death, Relindis was named to succeed her by Saint Boniface.[3]

Relindus was gifted in embroidery and painting.[4] The purported vestments of Sts. Harlindis and Relindis, now in Maaseik, Belgium are the earliest surviving examples of Anglo-Saxon embroidery. Traditionally attributed as the work of Sts. Harlindis and Relindis themselves, the works are not that old and are of Anglo-Saxon English origin, dated to the second half of the ninth century.

  1. ^ "Harlindis and Relindis, two intellectual pioneers in the Maasland region", Saint Catherine's Church Treasures, Maaseik
  2. ^ Vanderputten, Steven (15 May 2018). Dark Age Nunneries: The Ambiguous Identity of Female Monasticism, 800–1050. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-1597-6.
  3. ^ Biographie universelle, ancienne et moderne, etc (in French). Michaud. 1840.
  4. ^ Latin Saints of the Patriarchate of Rome