Английская Википедия:Ansbert

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:About Шаблон:Infobox saint Ansbert (died c. 695), sometimes called Ansbert of Chaussy, was a Frankish monk, abbot and bishop of Rouen, today regarded as a saint in the Catholic Church.

Early life

Ansbert was born at Chaussy-sur-Epte, a village in the Norman historical area known as the Vexin.[1] He was born to a noble family, and was highly educated.[2] He had a significant professional career, and is said to have served as a senior member of the court of the Merovingian king, Clotaire III.[2][3] As such, he was both chancellor and referendary.

Ansbert was engaged to be married to another future saint, Angadrisma.[3][4] Her father, said to have been another of Clotaire's chancellors,[4] arranged for her to wed his colleague, but Angadrisma – later a patroness of nuns – prayed for release from this obligation. Tradition states that dispensation was given to her after she was "struck down with leprosy",[5] a disfiguring malady which only disappeared when she joined a convent.[4][5] Some sources state that Ansbert later took a different bride.[5][6]

Religious vocation

In 673, the same year Clotaire died, Ansbert renounced his secular pursuits and became a monk of the Benedictine order. Six years later, he was elevated to abbot of his monastery, the illustrious Fontenelle Abbey. He followed two other saints in that office: Wandrille, the abbey's founder and first abbot, and Lambert, the second abbot, who vacated the office when he was named bishop of Lyons.[2][3][7][8] Under his leadership, Fontenelle prospered. His enterprises included a great expansion and refinement of the abbey's library,[3] and the establishment of local hospitals for the poor.[2][9]

During his time as abbot, Ansbert served as the confessor to King Theodoric III.[3] After several years, Ansbert was appointed archbishop of Rouen following the death of the previous officeholder, Saint Ouen, in 683 or 684.[2][3] His former mentor Saint Lambert performed his consecration,[2] and Ansbert was succeeded as abbot at Fontenelle by Hildebert (d. 701), who is also venerated as a saint.[10]

Despite his high office and eminent reputation, Ansbert was removed from the bishopric around the year 690.[11] By "a false accusation",[3] the powerful majordomo of the Frankish court, Pepin of Heristal, arranged his dismissal, either because of some kind of political opposition[11] or because Ansbert's "zeal was not well-received" and "his austere life caused offence".[2] He was sent into exile at the monastery of Hautmont where he stayed until his death, sometime between 692 and 695.[2][11] At some time Pepin apparently reconsidered his actions and agreed to allow Ansbert to return, but either he changed his mind again[11] or Ansbert died before making the trip.[2]

Legacy

The 12th-century chronicler Ordericus Vitalis relays a tale in which it was said that Ansbert's remains were desecrated and dispersed by soldiers of Hugh the Great. He asserts that the bones in question belonged to a different Ansbert, and that those of the saint were, at the time of his writing, still preserved safely at Fontenelle Abbey.[12] The 18th-century author Alban Butler, however, states that the remains were at some point transferred to St. Peter's Abbey in Ghent, where they were destroyed by Calvinists in 1578.[3]

A collective day of remembrance for all the many saints associated with Fontenelle Abbey is celebrated on 1 March.[13] Saint Ansbert's own annual feast day is 9 February.[6][10]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

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