Bertha, wife of Ethelbert, king of Kent
Bertha (Bercta), wife of Ethelbert, king of Kent. She was daughter
of Caribert, king of Paris, by his wife Ingoberga (Greg. Turon. iv. 26, ix. 26),
and lost her father in 575, her mother in 589. The date of her marriage is unknown,
but it was probably after the death of her mother, although Bede speaks of the king
receiving her "a parentibus." Ethelbert was still a heathen, and on his marriage
it was made a condition that his wife should be allowed to enjoy the exercise of
her own religion, and should be attended by a bishop. Liudhard, or Letard, who is
called by the Canterbury historians bp. of Senlis (Thorn, ed. Twysden, 1767), was
chosen to accompany her, and the remains of the church of St. Martin, at Canterbury,
were allotted for Christian worship (Bede, H. E. i. 26). It was partly, no
doubt, by her influence that Ethelbert was induced to receive the Roman mission
and to be baptized. Pope Gregory, in 601, when sending Mellitus to reinforce Augustine's
company, addressed a letter to Bertha, in which he compliments her highly on her
faith and knowledge of letters, and urges her to make still greater efforts for
the spread of Christianity. He also ascribes the conversion of the English mainly
to her, and compares her to the empress Helena (St. Greg. Epp. xii. 29; Haddan
and Stubbs, Councils, iii. 17, 18). The date of her death is unknown. She
was buried in the porch of St. Martin, in the church of SS. Peter and Paul (Bede,
H. E. ii. 5). Ethelbert seems to have married again after her death. She
was the mother of Eadbald, who succeeded to the throne on Ethelbert's death, and
of Ethelburga, who, in 625, was married to Edwin, King of Northumbria. As her son
was unbaptized in 616, it is probable that she found considerable difficulty in
promoting Christianity in her own family, or else that she died whilst her children
were very young. Elmham (ed. Hardwick, p. 110) says she took part in founding the
monastery of St. Augustine, at Christmas, 604, but this is merely traditional; and
the latest trustworthy trace of her is St. Gregory's letter of 601.
[S.]