Legend says that Sidwell was a Saxon Christian girl living in Exeter in the 8th century. Her stepmother wanted her killed, and hired a reaper to do the job. He cut off her head with a scythe, and where it fell, water sprang up. This became the well of St Sidwell, revered for the miracle and a place of pilgrimage in Anglo-Saxon and Norman England.
http://www.tellingourstoriesexeter.org. ... eturnid=80
Some sources say she was Romano-British, others that she was Saxon. Whatever the truth about the girl, and about her origin, she lived in Exeter at a time of change. The period from the departure of the Romans (around 410) until the time of King Alfred (9th century) was a period of great upheaval in the South West, and throughout Britain, and written records are few.
The Saxons probably reached Exeter some time towards the end of the 7th century. So if the date for Sidwell of 740 is right, and if she was in fact Anglo-Saxon (ie English) then Sidwell was one of the earliest English settlers in Exeter, and one of the earliest speakers of a language that sounds like our modern English. If she was Romano-British, as others claim, then she spoke something more like Welsh or Latin, and was part of a retreating and shrinking culture of the Dumnonii, which would soon be confined to Cornwall, west of the river Tamar.
A rather convoluted story. There would appear to be little difference between the time the Romans left and the Saxons arrived. Except for a few hundred years of course. She could have been this and she could have been that. But strangely they don't question the fact that a well sprang up when her head was chopped off.
But then this is a site dedicated to the modern saintly fabrication of multi culturalism and diversity. It's to tell the world that we have always been immigrants and all that sort of thing.
What they ignore is the history of well finding or water divining. Moses strikes a rock and water gushes forth. The whole of Europe is full of holy wells, usually found by saints of one sort or another. And there we go again, divine, sort, holywell. Sort being fate of course as we all know.
But the person who was responsible for finding the water source was a sourcier or sorcerer. But to men in dresses sorcerers were evil because they came before so best thing to do is call them saints and tell us how they were Christians who had their heads chopped off for no apparent reason. And why a scythe? Mind you death carries a scythe.
Which all goes to tell us that this lady existed or didn't exist long before curry houses, Saxons, Romans, Celtic poseurs and so on. She is a remnant of the old religion which was not a religion at all. It was called survival skills and if you didn't have them you didn't survive.
For some reason wells are associated with women. Which perhaps suggests a time when women had an important position in society or perhaps a specialised position. Mary well, Bridie's well and so on. Perhaps Sid was a bit of a tomboy in her day? Isn't there a place called Sidmouth somewhere down there? Perhaps it was a tribal designation?
Clean drinking water was vital for the well being of society. Oh dear there we go again, well. Just can't escape from words that always seem to hark back to the source of the idea.
Celui qui prétend découvrir des sources et des nappes d'eau souterraines, voire des métaux à l'état naturel et des trésors, le plus souvent en maniant une baguette de bois ou un pendule, selon les principes de la radiesthésie.
Fortunately for those who don't know any French this quote is from a French dictionary. So it should be easy enough to divine the meaning.
http://www.larousse.fr/dictionnaires/fr ... cier#72901
Of course the Church went on to persecute and destroy the original sourciers and sourcieres in order to preserve their monopoly on sainthood.
Rather like some people who gain chest loads of medals for all sorts of things.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... l#comments
They did the same in south and central America as we know. The Church is a very viscious organisation. It smiles then smites in the name of a god it hijacked from the middle east.
And all our water sources have been sold off to France, China, Germany and other ne'er do wells. What saint will get them back for us? That's the question.
I'm setting a shrine up to Sid at this very moment.