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词条 Sadalberga
释义

  1. Life

  2. Notes

{{Infobox saint
|name=Saint Salaberga
|birth_date=c. 605
|death_date=c. 670
|feast_day=September 22
|venerated_in=Roman Catholic Church
|image=
|imagesize=
|caption=
|birth_place=possibly Toul, France
|death_place=Laon, France
|titles=Abbess and foundress
|beatified_date=
|beatified_place=
|beatified_by=
|canonized_date=
|canonized_place=
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Saint Sadalberga (or Salaberga) (c. 605[1] – c. 670) was the daughter of Gundoin, Duke of Alsace and his wife Saretrude. Sadalberga founded the Abbey of St John at Laon. She is the subject of a short hagiography, the Vita Sadalbergae.

Life

Gundoin of Alsace was on close terms with Waldebert, a Frankish nobleman who later became abbot of Luxeuil. Waldebert would come to guide Sadalberga in her monastic endeavors.[2] According to her anonymous vita, Waldebert's predecessor, Saint Eustace of Luxeuil, had cured Sadalberga of blindness when she was a child.[3]

Although she was drawn to religious life, her parents forced her to marry. Her first husband, Richramn, died after two months.[2] Then she was wed to a nobleman, Blandinus, a close counselor of King Dagobert. She had five children, Saretrude, Ebana, Anstrudis, Eustasius (died in infancy), and Baldwin (Baudoin). Her husband Blandinus and two of her children, Baldwin (feast day October 16) and Anstrudis, became saints. Sadalberga's brother was Saint Bodo (d. 670). After some years, she and Blandinus agreed mutually to separate and assume contemplative lives. He became a hermit and she went into a nunnery at Poulangey.

Salaberga was subsequently foundress of the abbey of St. John the Baptist at Laon. One of her kinsman had been bishop there, and his successor supported her efforts. She died there c. 670,[4]and was succeeded as abbess by her daughter, Anstrudis.[5]

Notes

1. ^J. A. McNamara, J. E. Halborg, E. G. Whatley, eds. Sainted women of the Dark Ages (Duke University Press, 1992), p. 176.
2. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=p7lUBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA155&lpg=PA155&dq=Anstrudis&source=bl&ots=ahiyV8qVR9&sig=xSYXfPEiGp575SeelWqj91UMVFQ&hl=en&sa=X&ei=JckMVe6UAsuogwTx0oKwBg&ved=0CFwQ6AEwDg#v=onepage&q=Anstrudis&f=false Fox, Yaniv. Power and Religion in Merovingian Gaul, Cambridge University Press, 2014] {{ISBN|9781107064591}}
3. ^Alban Butler, Paul Burns, Butler's Lives of the Saints (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2000), 208.
4. ^Jamie Kreiner, The Social Life of Hagiography in the Merovingian Kingdom (Cambridge, 2014), p. 189.
5. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=QIWJZ7mAMJQC&pg=PA247&lpg=PA247&dq=Saint+Anstrudis&source=bl&ots=kq3PibmCJj&sig=kLV1dOsjXQ4rq5Mo1NK--el4ytY&hl=en&sa=X&ei=K2SDVJfNDrf9sASyuoGYCw&ved=0CDAQ6AEwBDgK#v=onepage&q=Saint%20Anstrudis&f=false Le Jan, Regine. "Convents, Violence and Competition for Power on Francia", Topographies of Power in the Early Middle Ages, (Frans Theuws, Mayke B. de Jong, and Carine Van Rhijn eds.), p. 250, Brill, 2001] {{ISBN|9789004117341}}
{{catholic}}{{Authority control}}{{France-saint-stub}}

5 : 7th-century Frankish women|670 deaths|7th-century Frankish saints|Year of birth unknown|Christian female saints of the Middle Ages

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