• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: King Harold’s Sister Gunhild (d. 1087), a Royal Exile in Flanders
  • Contributor: van Houts, Elisabeth
  • imprint: Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023
  • Published in: The English Historical Review
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1093/ehr/cead049
  • ISSN: 0013-8266; 1477-4534
  • Keywords: History
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>This article is a study of the life of Gunhild (d. 1087), sister of King Harold, who, together with her mother Gytha, sought exile in Flanders after the Norman Conquest; it is set in the wider context of the fate of high-status elite or royal women in post-Conquest England. Gunhild’s lead burial plaque with inscription (found in her tomb in the church of St Donatian in Bruges) constitutes a unique testimony to the fate of a royal sister in the aftermath of the Norman Conquest. Her Latin obituary, the longest known on a lead plaque for an eleventh-century woman, consists of a biographical sketch of her and her family, including her brother’s death, and her itinerary in exile, while the second half is a near-hagiographical account of her as a woman religious; a new edition and English translation are included in an appendix. The article analyses the historical, literary and material aspects of Gunhild’s life, including evidence from the archive of St Donatian as to the considerable wealth she bequeathed to the canons in return for her burial in the church’s wall. It is suggested that as a woman religious she lived a penitential life on foreign soil not least to pay for the sins of the English defeated by the Normans. Comparison with other English royal or high-status elite women (and men) suggests that, defiantly and uniquely, Gunhild and her mother Gytha rejected accommodation with the Conqueror and instead followed the path of exile abroad, more commonly chosen by men.</jats:p>