Ruothild (daughter of Charlemagne)

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Fragment of the silk with which Ruothild wrapped Saint Burgundofara's body Faremoutiers Amazons silk.jpg
Fragment of the silk with which Ruothild wrapped Saint Burgundofara's body
Notice of Ruothild's death, from a contemporary manuscript Ruothild death notice.png
Notice of Ruothild's death, from a contemporary manuscript

Ruothild (died 24 March 852) was a Carolingian princess and the abbess of Faremoutiers. [1] She was a daughter of Charlemagne and his concubine Madelgard, [2] who is the first of the concubines listed by Einhard in his Life of Charlemagne . [3]

Ruothild is generally thought to have been born after the death of Charlemagne's last wife, Liutgard, in 800, [4] although it has been suggested that she may be the unnamed daughter mentioned in a poem of Theodulf praising Liutgard's relationship with her stepchildren. [5]

As a daughter of Charlemagne, Ruothild probably received an education. [6] Later legend relates that her father gave her a gilt silver reliquary containing a piece of the True Cross. [7] As abbess, she oversaw the transfer of the relics of Burgundofara, the founder and namesake of Faremoutiers, to a new shrine. She had the body wrapped in a red Byzantine silk decorated with bare-breasted Amazons. Her choice of silk suggests familiarity with Orosius' Seven Books of History Against the Pagans, the standard text on the Amazons at the time. [8]

During her abbacy, Ruothild's half-brother, the Emperor Louis the Pious (r.814–840), granted the smaller convent at Gy-les-Nonains to Faremoutiers to shore up its economic position (and increase his own family's power). [9] In October 840, the Emperor Lothar I confirmed the grant to his "beloved aunt Rothildis" at her request. [10] By 842, as a result of the Carolingian civil war, Faremoutiers fell under the rule of Lothar's half-brother, Charles the Bald, and Ruothild requested his confirmation of the convent's properties, which he gave. [11]

Ruothild's year of death is indicated by a note added in the margin of the manuscript Reg. lat. 141 next to the year 852 in an Easter table. [12] The manuscript was created at Faremoutiers and the note is contemporary. [13] It reads simply Domna ruothild abb[atiss]a obiit ("Lady Ruothild, abbess, died"). [14] The necrology of Faremoutiers supplies the day of her death, 24 March, without indicating the year. [15] Ruothild was succeeded as abbess by Bertrada, who was probably Lothar's daughter. She had been a nun at Faremoutiers since the 830s. [16]

Notes

  1. McKitterick 2008, p. 92.
  2. Nelson 2019 , p. 440; Barbero 2004 , p. 138; Minois 2014 , p. 427; McKitterick 2008 , p. 92; Becher 2005 , p. 31; Cabaniss 1972 , p. 91; Nelson 1998 , p. 61.
  3. Barbero 2004 , p. 138; Fried 2016 , p. 471.
  4. Nelson 2019 , p. 440; Barbero 2004 , p. 138; Minois 2014 , p. 427; McKitterick 2008 , pp. 91–92.
  5. Cabaniss 1972 , p. 76. See also Werner 1967 , p. 443.
  6. Stevenson 2005, pp. 88–89.
  7. Schulenburg 2008, p. 71.
  8. Nelson 1998 , p. 46; Stevenson 2005 , p. 89.
  9. Airlie 2020 , p. 257; Hochstetler 1992 , p. 191.
  10. Airlie 2020 , p. 257; Screen 2004 , p. 36; Hochstetler 1992 , p. 192; Sot 2015 , p. 124; Werner 1967 , chart.
  11. Screen 2004 , p. 40; Werner 1967 , p. 445 n14.
  12. Sot 2015 , p. 124; Werner 1967 , p. 445 n14; Piggin 2017.
  13. Werner 1967 , p. 445 n14; Piggin 2017.
  14. Werner 1967, p. 445 n14.
  15. Sot 2015 , p. 124; Werner 1967 , p. 445 n14.
  16. Airlie 2020, p. 257.

Bibliography