St. Bathildis, Nun of Chelles and Queen of France

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

St. Bathildis, Nun of Chelles and Queen of France St. Bathildis, Nun of Chelles and Queen of France Icon Not Available Commemorated on January 30 An Anglo-Saxon by birth, Bathildis was captured by the invading armies from Denmark in 641 and sold to Erchinoald, the chief officer of the palace of Clovis II, King of France. She quickly gained favor, for she had charm, beauty, and a graceful and gentle nature. She also won the affection of her fellow-servants, for she showed them many kindnesses such as cleaning their shoes and mending their clothes, and her bright and attractive disposition endeared her to all. Erchinoald, impressed by her fine qualities, wished to make her his wife, but Bathildis, alarmed at the prospect, disguised herself in old and ragged clothes, and hid herself away among the servants at the palace. Erchinoald, thinking she had run away, married another woman. Her next suitor, however, was King Clovis. When Bathildis discarded her old clothes and appeared again, the king noticed her grace and beauty, and declared his love for her. In 649, the 19-year-old slave girl Bathildis became Queen of France. She bore Clovis three sons: Clotaire III, Childeric II, and Thierry III, all of whom became kings. On the death of her husband, she was appointed regent for her eldest son, Clotaire, who was only five, and she ruled capably for eight years with St. Eligius as her adviser. She made a good queen and ruled wisely. She never forgot that she had been a slave, and did all within her power to relieve those in captivity. It was written that Queen Bathildis was the holiest and most devout of women. Remembering her own bondage, she set apart vast sums for the redemption of captives. Bathildis helped promote Christianity by following the teachings of St. Ouen, St. Leodegardius, and many other bishops. During this period, the poorer inhabitants of France were often obliged to sell their children as slaves to meet the crushing taxes imposed upon them. Bathildis reduced their taxes, outlawed the purchase of Christian slaves and the sale of French subjects, and declared that any slave who set foot in France would from that moment be free. Thus, this enlightened women earned the love of her people and was a pioneer in the abolition of slavery. She also founded many abbeys, such as Corbie, Saint-Denis, and Chelles, which became settlements in wild and remote areas of France. Under her guidance, forests were reclaimed and agriculture flourished. She built hospitals and sold her jewelry to help the needy. When her son, Clotaire, came of age and ascended to the throne as King of France, Bathildis retired to her own royal abbey of Chelles, near Paris, where she served as an ordinary nun with humility and obedience. She died at Chelles before she had reached her 50th birthday. Death touched her with a gentle hand; as she died, she said she saw a ladder reaching from the altar to heaven, and up this she climbed in the company of angels. St. Bathildis is generally pictured as a crowned queen or nun before the altar of the Virgin, two angels support a child on a ladder, and reflects the vision she is said to have had at her death. By permission of www.orthodoxwiki.org.
Recommended publications
  • The Faces of History. the Imagined Portraits of the Merovingian Kings at Versailles (1837-1842)
    The faces of history. The imagined portraits of the Merovingian kings at Versailles (1837-1842) Margot Renard, University of Grenoble ‘One would expect people to remember the past and imagine the future. But in fact, when discoursing or writing about history, they imagine it in terms of their own experience, and when trying to gauge the future they cite supposed analogies from the past; till, by a double process of repeti- tion, they imagine the past and remember the future’. (Namier 1942, 70) The historian Christian Amalvi observes that during the first half of the nine- teenth century, most of the time history books presented a ‘succession of dyn- asties (Merovingians, Carolingians, Capetians), an endless row of reigns put end to end (those of the ‘rois fainéants’1 and of the last Carolingians especially), without any hierarchy, as a succession of fanciful portraits of monarchs, almost interchangeable’ (Amalvi 2006, 57). The Merovingian kings’ portraits, exhib- ited in the Museum of French History at the palace of Versailles, could be de- scribed similarly: they represent a succession of kings ‘put end to end’, with imagined ‘fanciful’ appearances, according to Amalvi. However, this vision dis- regards their significance for early nineteenth-century French society. Replac- ing these portraits in the broader context of contemporary history painting, they appear characteristic of a shift in historical apprehension. The French history painting had slowly drifted away from the great tradition established by Jacques-Louis David’s moralistic and heroic vision of ancient history. The 1820s saw a new formation of the historical genre led by Paul De- laroche's sentimental vision and attention to a realistic vision of history, restored to picturesqueness.
    [Show full text]
  • Merovingian Queens: Status, Religion, and Regency
    Merovingian Queens: Status, Religion, and Regency Jackie Nowakowski Honors Thesis Submitted to the Department of History, Georgetown University Advisor: Professor Jo Ann Moran Cruz Honors Program Chair: Professor Alison Games May 4, 2020 Nowakowski 1 Table of Contents: Acknowledgments………………………………………………………………………………..2 ​ Map, Genealogical Chart, Glossary……………………………………………………………3 ​ Introduction………………………………………………………………………………………7 ​ Chapter 1: The Makings of a Merovingian Queen: Slave, Concubine, or Princess………..18 ​ Chapter 2: Religious Authority of Queens: Intercessors and Saints………………………..35 ​ Chapter 3: Queens as Regents: Scheming Stepmothers and Murdering Mothers-in-law....58 ​ Conclusion……………………………………………………………………………………....80 ​ Bibliography…………………………………………………………………………………….83 ​ Nowakowski 2 Acknowledgements I would like to thank Professor Moran Cruz for all her guidance and advice; you have helped me become a better scholar and writer. I also want to thank Professor Games for your constant enthusiasm and for creating a respectful and fun atmosphere for our seminar. Your guidance over these past two semesters have been invaluable. I am also so grateful for my classmates, who always gave me honest and constructive feedback; I have enjoyed seeing where your projects take you. Most of all, I would like to thank my family and friends for listening to me talk nonstop about a random, crazy, dysfunctional family from the sixth century. I am incredibly thankful for my parents, sister, and friends for their constant support. Thank you mom for listening to a podcast on the Merovingians so you could better understand what I am studying. You have always inspired me to work hard and I probably wouldn’t have written a thesis without you as my inspiration. I also want to thank my dad, who always supported my studies and pretended to know more about a topic than he actually did.
    [Show full text]
  • Frank Royal Ancestry
    GRANHOLM GENEALOGY FRANK ROYAL ANCESTRY Introduction by Lars Granholm The Frank empire lasted about 500 years, (300-800 AD) as listed below. It covered approximately the present France and Germany, but during several wars the area changed constantly. Also different areas were split up among sons and other relatives and favorites. After Charlemagne France and Germany were established as separate countries. This presentation begins where the myth turns into history and ends with Charlemagne . For earlier legendary ancestry, to the time of the birth of Christ, see the link below by Jacob Holdt. http://www.american-pictures.com/english/jacob/x2269.htm (click on the yellow star) Descendants of: Pharamond King of the Franks As Related to: Lars Erik Granholm 1 Pharamond King of the Franks #16052 (51st great grand father) 2 Clodio King of the Franks #16051 b. 395 d. 448 (50th great grand father) 3 Merovech King of the Franks #16050 b. 411 France d. 457 (49th great grand father) m. Verica Queen of the Franks #16049 b. 419 Westfalen, Germany 4 Childeric I King of the Franks #16046 b. 440 Westfalen, Germany d. 481 (48th great grand father) m. Basina Queen of Thuringia #16047 b. 438 Thüringen d. abt 470 [daughter of Basin King of Thuringia #16048] 5 Clovis I King of the Franks #16040 b. 466 Loire-Atlantique, France d. 511 Saint Pierre church (47th great grand father) m. Saint Clotilde Queen of the Franks #16041 b. 475 d. 545 [daughter of Chilperic II King of Burgundy #16042 and Caretena Queen of Burgundy #16043] 6 Clotaire I King of the Franks #16037 b.
    [Show full text]
  • Francia. Band 42
    Yaniv Fox: Image of Kings Past. The Gibichung Legacy in Post-Conquest Burgundy, in: Francia 42 (2015), S. 1-26 . DOI: 10.11588/fr.2015.4.44567 Copyright Das Digitalisat wird Ihnen von perspectivia.net, der Online-Publikationsplattform der Max Weber Stiftung – Deutsche Geisteswissenschaftliche Institute im Ausland, zur Verfügung gestellt. Bitte beachten Sie, dass das Digitalisat urheberrechtlich geschützt ist. Erlaubt ist aber das Lesen, das Ausdrucken des Textes, das Herunterladen, das Speichern der Daten auf einem eigenen Datenträger soweit die vorgenannten Handlungen ausschließlich zu privaten und nicht-kommerziellen Zwecken erfolgen. Eine darüber hinausgehende unerlaubte Verwendung, Reproduktion oder Weitergabe einzelner Inhalte oder Bilder können sowohl zivil- als auch strafrechtlich verfolgt werden. Yaniv Fox IMAGE OF KINGS PAST The Gibichung Legacy in Post-Conquest Burgundy In the fnal chapter of the Chronicle of Fredegar, we read of an incident involving a patrician named Willebad. This was a convoluted affair, which concluded – the best Merovingian stories usually do – with a dramatic bloodletting1. As the story goes, in 643 Floachad, the newly appointed mayor of Burgundy decided to orchestrate the downfall of Willebad. The chronicler, who, we gather, was somewhat hostile to the Burgundian patrician, reasoned that Willebad had become »very rich by seizing the properties of a great many people by one means or another. Seemingly overcome with pride because of his position of patrician and his huge possessions, he was puffed up against Floachad and tried to belittle him«2. The logic behind this enmity seems quite straightforward, and not very different in fact from any of the other episodes that fll the pages of the Chronicle of Fredegar.
    [Show full text]
  • Francia. Band 42
    Yaniv Fox: Image of Kings Past. The Gibichung Legacy in Post-Conquest Burgundy, in: Francia 42 (2015), S. 1-26 . Copyright Das Digitalisat wird Ihnen von perspectivia.net, der Online-Publikationsplattform der Max Weber Stiftung – Deutsche Geisteswissenschaftliche Institute im Ausland, zur Verfügung gestellt. Bitte beachten Sie, dass das Digitalisat urheberrechtlich geschützt ist. Erlaubt ist aber das Lesen, das Ausdrucken des Textes, das Herunterladen, das Speichern der Daten auf einem eigenen Datenträger soweit die vorgenannten Handlungen ausschließlich zu privaten und nicht-kommerziellen Zwecken erfolgen. Eine darüber hinausgehende unerlaubte Verwendung, Reproduktion oder Weitergabe einzelner Inhalte oder Bilder können sowohl zivil- als auch strafrechtlich verfolgt werden. Yaniv Fox IMAGE OF KINGS PAST The Gibichung Legacy in Post-Conquest Burgundy In the final chapter of the Chronicle of Fredegar, we read of an incident involving a patrician named Willebad. This was a convoluted affair, which concluded – the best Merovingian stories usually do – with a dramatic bloodletting1. As the story goes, in 643 Floachad, the newly appointed mayor of Burgundy decided to orchestrate the downfall of Willebad. The chronicler, who, we gather, was somewhat hostile to the Burgundian patrician, reasoned that Willebad had become »very rich by seizing the properties of a great many people by one means or another. Seemingly overcome with pride because of his position of patrician and his huge possessions, he was puffed up against Floachad and tried to belittle him«2. The logic behind this enmity seems quite straightforward, and not very different in fact from any of the other episodes that fill the pages of the Chronicle of Fredegar.
    [Show full text]
  • Carolingian Propaganda: Kingship by the Hand of God
    Isak M. C. Sexson Hist. 495 Senior Thesis Thesis Advisor: Martha Rampton April 24, 2000 Carolingian Propaganda: Kingship by the Hand of God Introduction and Thesis Topic: The Carolingians laid the foundation for their successful coup in 751 very carefully, using not only political and religious alliances, but also the written word to ensure a usurpation of Merovingian power. Up until, and even decades after Pippin III’s coup, the Carolingians used a written form of propaganda to solidify their claims to the throne and reinforce their already existent power base. One of the most successful, powerful and prominent features of the Carolingians’ propaganda campaign was their use of God and divine support. By divine support, I mean the Carolingians stressed their rightful place as rulers of Christiandom and were portrayed as both being aided in their actions by God and being virtuous and pious rulers. This strategy of claiming to fulfill Augustine’s vision of a “city of God” politically would eventually force the Carolingians into a tight corner during the troubled times of Louis the Pious. The Word Propaganda and Historiography: The word propaganda is a modern word which did not exist in Carolingian Europe. It carries powerful modern connotations and should not be applied lightly when discussing past documents without keeping its modern usage in mind at all times. As Hummel and Huntress note in their book The Analysis of Propaganda, “‘Propaganda’ is a 1 word of evil connotation . [and] the word has become a synonym for a lie.”1 In order to avoid the ‘evil connotations’ of modern propaganda in this paper I will limit my definition of propaganda to the intentional reproduction, distribution and exaggeration or fabrication of events in order to gain support.
    [Show full text]
  • Approaches to Community and Otherness in the Late Merovingian and Early Carolingian Periods
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by White Rose E-theses Online Approaches to Community and Otherness in the Late Merovingian and Early Carolingian Periods Richard Christopher Broome Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Leeds School of History September 2014 ii The candidate confirms that the work submitted is his own and that appropriate credit has been given where reference has been made to the work of others. This copy has been supplied on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. The right of Richard Christopher Broome to be identified as Author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. © 2014 The University of Leeds and Richard Christopher Broome iii Acknowledgements There are many people without whom this thesis would not have been possible. First of all, I would like to thank my supervisor, Ian Wood, who has been a constant source of invaluable knowledge, advice and guidance, and who invited me to take on the project which evolved into this thesis. The project he offered me came with a substantial bursary, for which I am grateful to HERA and the Cultural Memory and the Resources of the Past project with which I have been involved. Second, I would like to thank all those who were also involved in CMRP for their various thoughts on my research, especially Clemens Gantner for guiding me through the world of eighth-century Italy, to Helmut Reimitz for sending me a pre-print copy of his forthcoming book, and to Graeme Ward for his thoughts on Aquitanian matters.
    [Show full text]
  • The Merovingian Mirror
    The Merovingian Mirror 2016 Table of Contents Honorary Presidents General Table of Contents………………………….. 2 Honorary Presidents General………………. 2 Remarks of the President General………… 3 Officers of the Order……..………………... 4 Proposed Slate of Officers 2017-2019…….. 5 New Members……………………………... 6 Candidate Proposal Form………………….. 7 Richard Allen Gregory Hardwick Smith Johnson, Jr., Ed.D. 2004-2009 2009-2011 2016 Minutes of the Annual Meeting...……. 8-9 Barbarian Kings, Franks & Merovingians…. 10-15 Annual Meeting..…………………………... 16 Scholarships………..….....………………… 16 2017 Speaker Dr. C. Brian Rose...………… 17 Recollections from 2016….……………….. 18-20 Merovingian Bloodlines…….....………….. 21 COL Charles C. Lucas, M.D. Brantley Carter Bolling Knowles 2011-2013 2013-2015 Silk Scarf Order Form…………………….. 22 Membership Supply Order Form………….. 23 Report corrections to the Secretary General Cover Baptême de Clovis à Reims Le 25 décembre 498 (496 selon certains historiens) Website www.merovingiandynasty.org Editor: Barry Christopher Howard Remarks of the OMD President General Dianne Alley Robinson My sincere thanks to each of you for the honor of serving our august Order as your President General. The past two years could not have been more enjoyable and productive. I have my Board and Advisory Council to thank, as well as our Honorary Presidents General for their sage advice and support. Our membership continues to thrive and grow under the excel- lent work of Karen McClendon, Registrar, and John R. Har- man, Jr., Genealogist. Both labor on our behalf to see that the Order’s lineages remain accurate and that each applicant feels special. The Finances of the Order are very healthy, thanks to the ef- forts of Barry Howard, Treasurer, and the kind donations from so many of you.
    [Show full text]
  • Merovingian Mirror
    Reflecting on the Merovingian Dynasty Merovingian Mirror Newsletter of the Order of the Merovingian Dynasty: 448-751 www.merovingiandynasty.com Fall 2010 Volume 3, Issue 1 Officers... Greetings from the President General... PRESIDENT GENERAL Hardwick Smith Johnson, Jr. EdD Make plans now to attend our Annual Meeting Dear Members, 1ST VICE PRESIDENT GENERAL on Wednesday, April 13, 2011 which will again Charles Clement Lucas, Jr., MD Thanks to each of be held at the City Tavern Club. Doug you who attended Richardson will speak and autograph the second 2ND VICE PRESIDENT GENERAL Charles William Neuhauser and helped make editions of his monumental Plantagenet our April Meeting Ancestry and Magna Carta Ancestry. 3RD VICE PRESIDENT GENERAL very successful. Juanita Sue Pierce Augustus Thank you for the honor and opportunity to 4TH VICE PRESIDENT GENERAL It was a great serve as your President General. I look forward John Hallberg Jones moment in the to greeting each of you at our Annual Meeting. GENEALOGIST GENERAL Order’s history to Timothy Field Beard, FASG present the first Hardwick Smith Johnson, Jr., EdD annual Cornelia INTERIM REGISTRAR GENERAL Barry C. Howard “Nellie” Smith Isenhour Scholarship to Margaret “Meg” INTERIM WEBMASTER Andrews, a student at the University of Barry C. Howard Pennsylvania. The award was presented by SECRETARY GENERAL Dianne A. Robinson, who endowed the Linda Corinne Mistler, PhD scholarship fund in memory of her ASST. SECRETARY GENERAL grandmother. Bromme Hampton Cole Dr. Brian Rose presented an interesting, CHAPLAIN GENERAL informative and entertaining update on his The Rev. Dr. Albert Clinton Walling II work with the excavation of ancient Troy.
    [Show full text]
  • The Fabulous Race Aliens and the Merovingian Mythology Gérard De Sède
    Loose translation from French to English of the book 'La race fabuleuse' by Gerard de Sède The Fabulous Race Aliens and the Merovingian mythology Gérard de Sède Edition J’ai lu - 1973 Prologue I would probably never have written these pages without the help of marquis de B., who passed away two years ago. Their unusual turn is due to him, in any case. B. wanted to remain anonymous. Despite this, it is to be foreseen that some insiders will be able to identify him: good for them. As for me, I respect his wishes. Many admired his knowledge which was broad and exact as I have been able to verify a hundred times. Nevertheless, some people just thought of him as a mad historian; it is true that he had a vivid imagination, a great induction power and he drew amazing conclusions from his research. Others thought that a secret society had taught him to only express himself by means of symbols, in such a way that while pretending to treat one subject, he was in fact treating an other one without any connection or analogy to the first one. I was not able to choose between the three opinions. All I knew was that marquis de B. was an unusual man and that he had become my friend. It was he who has provided me with some of the files that you are going to read, so I have to start by telling who he was and how I knew him. Nothing in his appearance distinguished him from other people.
    [Show full text]
  • Saint Eligius
    Saint Eligius Bishop and Confessor Eligius was born north of Limoges, Aquitaine, Eligius began to use his position and esteem to which would become part of modern day France, in 588 obtain alms for the poor and to ransom captives of foreign AD. Chlothar II was the King of Neustria, of which tribes and nations who arrived at the slave market in Limoges was a subject. Eligius’ father would send him to Marseilles. As Eligius became more devoted to the faith, Limoges to apprentice as a goldsmith under a man named he began to take on the practice of self-mortification. Abbo. When Eligius was 11 years old in 599 AD, With King Dagobert’s consent, Eligius would send his Aquitaine became split when King Chlothar went to war servants throughout the towns and villages of the against his nephews Theuderic and Theudebert which he kingdom to take down the bodies of executed criminals lost, resulting in northern Neustria being given to his and give them a decent burial. nephews. Eligius began to live a strict monastic life along During this time when Neustria was split, Eligius with a friend Dado, which had been introduced into Gaul came to excel at goldsmithing, and traveled to the palace by saint Columbanus. By 632 AD Eligius began to found at Neustria, where he worked under the royal treasurer monasteries and would introduce this rule into the Babo. In 610, King Chlothar II’s nephews went to war monasteries. with each other. Chlothar supported Theuderic in the war, While cordial to the faith, King Dagobert himself crushing Theudebert in exchange for the return of was not as faithful as his father to Church teaching.
    [Show full text]
  • Taking History On-Line
    Academic Essays The rise of the Carolingians or the decline of the Merovingians? by Emily Wilson The transference of power from the Merovingians to the Carolingians in France is one of the most confusing periods of early medieval history. In coming to a conclusion about whether this transference was due more the decline of the Merovingians, or more to the rise of the Carolingians, there are many considerations, often conflicting, and the sources are far from comprehensive. Nevertheless, this is a period which repays consideration, as it was instrumental in the formation of medieval France. Ultimately, a conclusion to the question ‘should we speak of the rise of the Carolingians or the decline of the Merovingians?’ may not be possible. This essay will argue that the terms “rise” and “decline” suggest an inevitability which is not supported by the evidence. In so doing the focus will be almost exclusively on political history for the reason that this is the area that the documentary sources shed the most light. Unfortunately, while this is the area that leads to the most certain conclusions, this will mean that the paper will have to gloss over certain aspects of ecclesiastical and economic history—both areas which have a significant impact on this question, and have largely ignored the areas of military and diplomatic history, also important in any consideration of this period. By focusing on political history however, it will be shown that this was a period characterised by a vitality and change, where the eventual victors were far from certain. The historian examining the Merovingian and Carolingian dynasties faces a problem familiar to any historian of the early medieval period: the scarcity of sources.
    [Show full text]