Adelaide II, Abbess of Quedlinburg

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Adelaide II
Hase Quast 1877 S 12 Nr 3 Adelheid II.jpg
Tombstone of Princess Adelaide II
Princess-Abbess of Quedlinburg
Reign1063 – 11 January 1096
Predecessor Beatrix I
Successor Eilica
Born1045 (1045)
Goslar (?), Saxony
Died11 January 1096(1096-01-11) (aged 50–51)
Quedlinburg, Saxony
Burial
House Salian dynasty
Father Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor
Mother Agnes of Poitou
Religion Roman Catholic

Adelaide II (German: Adelheid; 1045-1096) was a member of the Salian Dynasty and powerful abbess of Gandersheim and Quedlinburg from 1063 to 1096. As daughter of Henry III , sister of Henry IV , and half-sister to Beatrice I , she had an important role in the German monarch and the religious revolution, the Investiture Controversy.

Contents

Family

Adelaide was born about September/October 1045, presumably at the Imperial Palace of Goslar, as the first child of King Henry III of Germany (1016–1056) from his second marriage with the French princess Agnes of Poitou (c.1025–1077), a daughter of Duke William V of Aquitaine. Henry had vainly hoped for a male heir to the throne; unsettled, the royal couple headed for their coronation by Pope Clement II in Rome the following year. Not until 1050, a son, Henry IV, was born, to the great relief of his parents. Adelaide's father died in 1056, leaving their minor son and his siblings under the regency of the dowager empress.

Early Life and Abbacy

Within the Salian Dynasty, the women, including Adelaide II, were educated, literate, and extremely rich. Each of these factors aided in the power that these women wielded.

From Adelaide II’s early life, there is context given by a twelfth-century document written by someone called Annalista Saxo. He wrote that Adelaide was living at the monastery of Gandersheim where her half-sister, Beatrice, was abbess, as most of the imperial princesses had done to that point because they could be safe and educated at Gandersheim and prepared for the future role in the Church. Her succession of Quedlinburg and Gandersheim followed the death of Beatrice I, bringing Adelaide to power in the abbess role.

In the Annalista Saxo, there are accounts which discuss Adelaide’s decision to become a nun, offering some more clues about her early life. Adelaide grew up and felt the call to become a nun when she was persuaded to take vows by a man named Ekkhard, a canon of the church of Saint Stephen in Halberstad, and Bishop Burchard II of Halberstadt. She became a canoness at Gandersheim where she eventually succeeded Beatrice as abbess.

Before Adelaide II, the role of abbess appeared to be a hereditary position for females within the dynasty to proceed one another in the abbey. Whereas Beatrice was imposed on the community as abbess by her father, Adelaide was elected abbess of Gandersheim in 1063, after Beatrice died. Two years later, she became abbess of Quedlinburg in 1063.

During Adelaide II’s time in the Abbey, she proved to be powerful in many ways, even though women’s roles in the abbey were heavily brushed over.  A document survived that states Adelaide negotiated with a local Duke, Magnus of Saxony , to protect a piece of property, owned by the monastery of Quedlingburg, from the “infestation of bad men,” which most likely meant some plundering or abuse of tenants or both happened and Adelaide sought to drive them away by allying with a powerful noble. The nuns agreed to make a substantial payment of livestock and various goods once a year in exchange for protection.

Most historians refer to the position as “princess-abbess” because women like Adelaide never surrendered their role as a princess of the realm. Germany was ruled by a king but there was also a representative body of the kingdom’s nobles called the imperial diet. At the meetings of the imperial diet, the nobility (usually called the princes and princess-abbesses of the kingdom) voted on proposed laws. There are several princess-abbesses who had an individual vote at these meetings, and both Gandersheim and Quedlingburg did.

Adelaide II and her family were directly involved with the secular abuse of power within the Monarchy. Adelaide’s position as abbess of Quedlinburg and Gandersheim fell under the influence of St. Benedictine. This exclusive position was traditionally elected by the community. However, a precedent set in 937 by Emperor Otto I later afforded them the right to elect their abbess from among their own. The Salian Dynasty appeared to take hold of this opportunity, as they had appointed Beatrice I directly. Although mentioned before, Adelaide II was elected by the community. While Adelaide II found her role within this abuse of secular power, she eventually defied her family’s expectations and sided with the church. While at first Adelaide II opposed her family’s position and sided with Pope Gregory VII, she was devoted to her role as abbess and spiritual foundations, asserting herself a powerful figure within this church and state reform.

Involvement In The Investiture Controversy

Well before 1076, tension had been building up, concerning the power, influence, and leadership between church and state within Western Europe. This tension began as a grassroots reform, a bottom-up approach, as seen through the abuses of church members and monasteries as well as the oppression of peasants. The rise of feudalism, private lordship, and attacks against the Church led to an informal alliance between peasantry and the clergy as they fought to protect basic freedoms.

While this papacy reform began at the bottom, this did not dismiss that there was trouble in Rome. After trouble with the Council of Sutri (1046), Benedict IX (1032-44), Gregory VI (1045-46), and Clement II (1046-47) Emperor Henry III appointed Bishop Bruno of Toul (also known as Pope Leo IX). Pope Leo IX became the first semi-reformist Pope, which came as a surprise to Henry IV.

At the Synod at Rome (1059), Pope Nicholas II asserted the College of Cardinals was the only institution empowered to appoint the Pope. By limiting the involvement of papal decisions to the Church, the German kingdom perceived this as a direct attack against their authority. Nicholas II went further by condemning lay investiture, challenging the power of noble men and women and questioning the validity of state-inserted bishops.

The Investiture Controversy began in 1076, between Pope Gregory VII (the most radical Pope seen yet) and Henry IV. Pope Gregory began the conflict with his writing and distribution of the Dictatus Papae , which consisted of a list of powers allotted to the Pope, under his control. When Henry IV attempted to appoint the Archbishop of Milan in 1076, Pope Gregory refused this appointment. Both leaders entered into a period of denouncing one another, until Pope Gregory VII excommunicated Henry IV in 1076. This ultimately led to the Saxon Rebellion in 1077.

The Saxon Rebellion held space for many of Germany’s nobles to turn against Henry IV. Here, Adelaide II, used Quedlinburg as a prominent venue within the rebellion. Adelaide II and Henry IV, her brother, had a history of tension, which led to her siding against him within this conflict. In the past, Henry IV had his sister disgraced by one of his companions, and this resulted in a strain between the two. Adelaide II took this chance to work against Henry IV, and was not a supporter of his interests.(technically cite). Therefore, Adelaide II went against her family, the Salian Dynasty, and sided with the church to reform the influence of the power between secular spiritual leaders. This speaks to her devotion to her role as abbess.

Quedlinburg stuck out to be a prominent venue within the Saxon Rebellion, and in 1085, a Synod took place there in Quedlinburg, Germany, and was led by Gregory’s legate. Here they discussed Henry’s excommunication, and the ramification and consequences of the decision, therefore leading to further conversation about what was next. The council ultimately held this Synod in support of the papacy.

Death

Adelaide II died on January 11, 1096 at the age of 51. She would be succeeded by her niece Agnes, who was the daughter of her sister Judith. Adelaide II is buried next to her predecessors Adelaide I and her half-sister Beatrice in the Collegiate Church.

References

    Adelaide II, Abbess of Quedlinburg
    Born: 1045 Died: 11 January 1096
    Regnal titles
    Preceded by Princess-Abbess of Quedlinburg
    1063 – 11 January 1096
    Succeeded by
    Abbess of Gandersheim
    1061 – 11 January 1096
    Succeeded by