Adelaide of Italy

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Saint Adelaide of Italy
Sainte-Adélaïde - Église de Toury, vitraux par Lorin.jpg
Holy Roman Empress
Born 931
Upper Burgundy, France
Died 16 December 999
Seltz, Alsace
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church,
Eastern Orthodox Church
Canonized 1097 by Pope Urban II[1] (Roman Catholicism)
Feast 16 December
Attributes Empress dispensing alms and food to the poor, often beside a ship
Patronage abuse victims; brides; empresses; exiles; in-law problems; parenthood; parents of large families; princesses; prisoners; second marriages; step-parents; widows

Adelaide of Italy (931 – 16 December 999), also called Adelaide of Burgundy, was the second wife of Holy Roman Emperor Otto the Great[2] and was crowned as the Holy Roman Empress with him by Pope John XII in Rome on February 2, 962. She was the daughter-in-law of St. Queen Matilda of East Francia. Empress Adelaide was perhaps the most prominent European woman of the 10th century; she was regent of the Holy Roman Empire as the guardian of her grandson in 991-995.[2]

Life

Born in Orbe Castle, Orbe, Kingdom of Upper Burgundy (now in modern-day Switzerland), she was the daughter of Rudolf II of Burgundy, a member of the Elder House of Welf, and Bertha of Swabia.[3] Her first marriage, at the age of fifteen, was to the son of her father's rival in Italy, Lothair II, the nominal King of Italy;[4] the union was part of a political settlement designed to conclude a peace between her father and Hugh of Provence, the father of Lothair. Their daughter, Emma of Italy, was born about 948.

Marriage to Otto I

Adelaide and her second spouse Otto I

The Calendar of Saints states that her first husband was poisoned by the holder of real power, his successor, Berengar of Ivrea, who attempted to cement his political power by forcing her to marry his son, Adalbert; when she refused and fled, she was tracked down and imprisoned for four months at Como.

According to Adelheid's contemporary biographer, Odilo of Cluny, she managed to escape from captivity. After a time spent in the marshes nearby, she was rescued and taken to a "certain impregnable fortress," likely the fortified town of Canossa near Reggio.[5] She managed to send an emissary to Otto I, and asked the East Frankish king for his protection. The widow met Otto at the old Lombard capital of Pavia and they married in 951.[6] Pope John XII crowned Otto Holy Roman Emperor in Rome on February 2, 962, and, breaking tradition, also crowned Adelaide as Holy Roman Empress.[7]

In Germany, the crushing of a revolt in 953 by Liudolf, Otto's son by his first marriage, cemented Adelheid's position, for she retained all her dower lands. She and their eleven-year-old son, the crown prince who became Otto II, accompanied Otto in 966 on his third expedition to Italy, where Otto restored the newly elected Pope John XIII to his throne (and executed some of the Roman rioters who had deposed him). Adelheid remained in Rome for six years while Otto ruled his kingdom from Italy. Their son Otto II was crowned co-emperor in 967, then married the Byzantine princess Theophanu in April 972, resolving the conflict between the two empires in southern Italy, as well as ensuring the imperial succession. Adelheid and her husband then returned to Germany, where Otto died in May 973, at the same Memleben palace where his father had died 37 years earlier.

Retirement

Adelaide had long entertained close relations with Cluny, then the center of the movement for ecclesiastical reform, and in particular with its abbots Majolus and Odilo. She retired to a nunnery she had founded in c. 991 at Selz in Alsace.[8] Though she never became a nun, she spent the rest of her days there in prayer. On her way to Burgundy to support her nephew Rudolf III against a rebellion, she died at Selz Abbey on December 16, 999, days short of the millennium she thought would bring the Second Coming of Christ. She had constantly devoted herself to the service of the church and peace, and to the empire as guardian of both; she also interested herself in the conversion of the Slavs. She was thus a principal agent—almost an embodiment—of the work of the pre-schism Orthodox Catholic Church at the end of the Early Middle Ages in the construction of the religious culture of Central Europe.[9] Some of her relics are preserved in a shrine in Hanover. Her feast day, December 16, is still kept in many German dioceses.

Issue

In 947, Adelaide was married to King Lothair II of Italy.[10] The union produced one child:

In 951, Adelaide was married to King Otto I, the future Holy Roman Emperor.[11] The union produced four children:

Legacy

See also

Notes

  1. The Saint, Andre Vauchez, Medieval Callings, ed. Jacques Goff Le, (University of Chicago Press, 1990), 322.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Campbell, Thomas. "St. Adelaide." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1907. 20 Sept. 2012
  3. Appendix, The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3, C.900-c.1024, ed. Timothy Reuter, Rosamond McKitterick, (Cambridge University Press, 1999), 699.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Odilo of Cluny, Epitaph of Adelheid ch. 3, in Gilsdorf, Queenship and Sanctity, 131
  6. Burgundy and Provence, 879–1032, Constance Brittain Bouchard,The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3, C.900-c.1024, 342.
  7. The Ottonians as kings and emperors, Eckhard Müller-Mertens, The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3, C.900-c.1024, 251.
  8. "Saint Adelaide of Burgundy". Saints.SQPN.com. 15 June 2012. Web. {2012-9-20}.
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Ferdinand Holböck, Married Saints and Blesseds: Through the Centuries, transl. Michael J. Miller, (Ignatius Press, 2002), 126.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 Ferdinand Holböck, Married Saints and Blesseds: Through the Centuries, 127.
  12. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  13. Chicago, 104-105.

Bibliography

  • Attwater, Donald and Catherine Rachel John. The Penguin Dictionary of Saints. New York: Penguin Books (1993). ISBN 0-14-051312-4.
  • Chicago, Judy. The Dinner Party: From Creation to Preservation. London: Merrell (2007). ISBN 1-85894-370-1
  • Gilsdorf, Sean, trans. Queenship and Sanctity: The Lives of Mathilda and the Epitaph of Adelheid. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press (2004). ISBN 0-81321-374-6

References

External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons

Royal titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Edith of Wessex
Queen consort of Germany
951–961
Vacant
Title next held by
Theophanu
Vacant
Title last held by
Bertila of Spoleto
Empress consort of the Holy Roman Empire
962–973