Juthwara

As a remedy, her stepmother recommended two soft cheeses be applied to her breasts, telling her son, Bana, that Juthwara was pregnant.

[5][6] Juthwara's death took place at Halyngstoka, generally accepted as Halstock in Dorset, where she is known as Juthware, and where local tradition points to a field still called by her name, modernised to 'Judith'.

In July 2012, Halstock's parish church of St Mary had its dedication extended to include Juthware, in recognition of the local tradition.

[7] Juthwara's body was translated to Sherborne Abbey in the early eleventh century and her shrine remained a place of pilgrimage there until the Dissolution.

[8] Juthwara is depicted in the Great East Window of Sherborne Abbey,[8] and on a number of altar screens in Devon, in company with her sister Sidwell.