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Matilda of Ringelheim (Template:C. – 14 March 968Template:Sfn), also known as Saint Matilda, was a Saxon noblewoman who became queen of Germany. Her husband, Henry the Fowler, was the first king from the Ottonian dynasty,Template:Sfn and their eldest son, Otto the Great, restored the Holy Roman Empire in 962.Template:Sfn Matilda founded several spiritual institutions and women's convents. She was considered to be extremely pious, righteous and charitable. Matilda's two hagiographical biographies and The Deeds of the Saxons serve as authoritative sources about her life and work.

Early life and dynastic connectionsEdit

Matilda was born in around 892. She was a daughter of Reinhild and Dietrich. He was count of the Duchy of Saxony in the Kingdom of Germany, formed fifty years earlier after the Treaty of Verdun. Fighting against Charlemagne at that time had been the Saxon duke Widukind, from whom Dietrich was descended.

It was in Herford Abbey, in the Duchy of Saxony, that Matilda was raised by her grandmother (also called Matilda). She had three sisters; Amalrada, Bia and Fridarun. Fridarun was to go on to marry Charles the Simple, king of West Francia. Matilda also had a brother, Beuve, who would eventually become Beuve II, Bishop of Châlons-sur-Marne.Template:Sfn Matilda was to have a niece called Fridarun, whose marriage to Count Wichmann the Elder meant there was an alliance between the House of Billung and the Ottonian family. This expanded their possessions to the west.Template:Sfn

Marriage to Henry IEdit

When Matilda was seventeen, in 909, she married Henry, at the time duke of Saxony. He subsequently became king of East Francia. Henry's first marriage to Hatheburg of Merseburg had been annulled.<ref>Previously a nun, Hatheburg's marriage was annulled in 909 because the Catholic Church deemed that her vows as a nun had not been broken, though she had borne Henry's son Thankmar. His legitimacy was jeopardised by this annulment.</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Some twenty years later, in 929, Matilda received her dower, which Henry gave her in the so-called Hausordnung. This dower amounted to land in Quedlinburg, Pöhlde, Nordhausen, Grona (near Göttingen) and Duderstadt.Template:Sfn

As queen, Matilda took an interest in women's monasteries. Her influence on the king's reign is said to have been her strong sense of justice.Template:Sfn

ChildrenEdit

Matilda bore the king five children:

Life as a widowEdit

Henry died in 936 in Memleben and was buried in Quedlinburg. It was here that Queen Matilda founded a convent in the same year.Template:Sfn She lived there during the following years and took care of the family's legacy. Thus, Quedlinburg Abbey became not only the most important centre of prayer in the kingdom, but also a place to commemorate its famous dead.Template:Sfn

As with other convents in the kingdom, Quedlinburg became a place for the education of noble families' daughters. Some became abbesses, securing a family's influence. One such was Matilda's own granddaughter, Matilda. She was the daughter of the above-mentioned Otto I and Adelheid of Burgundy. It was to this granddaughter that the queen, in 966, after 30 years' leadership, passed on responsibility for the convent. This Matilda thus became the first abbess of the convent in Quedlinburg.Template:Sfn

With her other resources, Queen Matilda founded more convents, one of them in Enger in 947.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Her last foundation was in 961, the convent of Nordhausen.Template:Sfn

Over the years 936–946, Matilda's handling of her dower was disputed by her son Otto. He claimed his mother's possessions. Eventually this led to her fleeing into exile. Otto's wife, Queen Eadgyth, is said to have brought about a reconciliation: Matilda was to leave her wealth, and furthermore Otto was to be forgiven for his actions.Template:Sfn

The above feud remains controversial to this day: to protect her legacy in the lead up to her death early in 968, Matilda acquired for all monasteries in eastern Saxony papal privileges.Template:Sfn These were overridden after her death when Matilda's dower passed to Theophanu, the wife of Matilda's grandson Otto II.Template:Sfn

DeathEdit

Queen Matilda died in the convent of Quedlinburg on 14 March 968, after a long illness.Template:Sfn She was buried in Quedlinburg Abbey, next to her late husband.Template:Sfn Throughout her life, Matilda had been dedicated to charity and her ecclesiastical foundations – as attested repeatedly in two hagiographies.Template:SfnTemplate:Pn A commemorative plaque can be found in the Walhalla memorial near Regensburg, Germany.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

LegacyEdit

Matilda is the patron of the St. Mathilde church in Laatzen (Germany), the St. Mathilde church in Quedlinburg (Germany), the Melkite church in Aleppo (Syria), and the Mathilden-Hospital in Herford (Germany). Her feast day is 14 March.

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

CitationsEdit

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SourcesEdit

Further readingEdit

  • Sean Gilsdorf: Queenship and Sanctity The Lives of Mathilda and The Epitaph of Adelheid, Washington, D.C., 2004.


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