Sophia I, Abbess of Gandersheim

Sophia I
Adelaide of Quedlinburg and Sophia of Gandersheim, by Lucas Cranach (1546)
Abbess of Gandersheim
Reign 1002–1039
Predecessor Gerberga II
Successor Adelaide II
Abbess of Essen
Reign 1011–1039
Predecessor Mathilde
Successor Theophanu
Born September 975(?)
Died 30 January 1039
Gandersheim Abbey, Saxony
Burial Gandersheim Abbey
Dynasty Ottonian
Father Otto II, Holy Roman Emperor
Mother Empress Theophanu
Religion Roman Catholic

Sophia I (September 975[1] – 30 January 1039), a member of the royal Ottonian dynasty, was Abbess of Gandersheim from 1002, and from 1011 also Abbess of Essen. The daughter of Emperor Otto II and his consort Theophanu, she was an important kingmaker in medieval Germany.[2]

Early life

According to the chronicles by Thietmar of Merseburg, Sophia was born to Emperor Otto II and Theophanu. She may have been the first surviving daughter, born in 975, though other sources indicate that her sister Adelaide, born 977, was in fact the eldest. Sophia is first documented in a 979 deed of donation, when her father entrusted her education to his first cousin, Abbess Gerberga II of Gandersheim. Sophia was raised and educated in the Gandersheim Abbey to become abbess since childhood.[3] Abbess Gerberga taught her convent discipline and common law, both of which she mastered.[4] Sophia received many grants of rights and property by her father as well as by her brother, Otto III, who succeeded as King of the Romans in 983.

Sophia took the vows to become a canoness in 989. As an emperor's daughter, she insisted to receive the veil from the hands of Archbishop Willigis of Mainz, the archchancellor of the Holy Roman Empire, affronting the local Bishop Osdag of Hildesheim. The contemporary chronicler Thangmar, in his Vita Bernwardi (Life of Saint Bernward), reveals a fierce row between the church leaders in front of King Otto III, his mother Theophanu and the royal court. She was finally consecrated by both. In Hildesheim sources, Sophia is portrayed as a haughty and imperious woman, though these depictions may be biased.

Sophia and her brother seemed to be on good terms with each other; she received several donations and attended the 994 Imperial Diet, where Otto was declared to have reached majority. He vested his sister with the estates of the Eschwege convent, at the explicit wish of their late mother Theophanu who had died in 991. From 995 until 997, Sophia was absent from the convent, accompanying her brother on his first Italian campaign and acting as his consort. She acted as abbess of Eschwege from 997. Thereafter, however, she no longer appeared at Otto's court.

Princess-abbess

In 1001, her tutor Abbess Gerberga II of Gandersheim died. However, due to her brother's death, Sophia was not to be elected her successor until 1002, with the approval of the new king Henry II. Sophia would later fight her ecclesiastical superiors who, with approval of Emperor Henry II, endangered Gandersheim's privilges and her own status.[3][4]

Together with her sister Adelaide Quedlinburg, Sophia significantly influenced the election of Henry II as King of the Romans and legitimazing him in 1024, when he visited Vreden and Quedlinburg. Sophia and her sister would play the same role in the election of Conrad II as first Holy Roman Emperor of the Salian dynasty.[3]

In 1011, Sophia was also granted the Abbey of Essen, on the death of her cousin Mathilde. The succession had initially been reserved for her younger sister Matilda, who nevertheless had married Count Palatine Ezzo of Lotharingia instead. According to the local historian Georg Humann (1847–1932), Essen was always secondary for Sophia, and the importance of the abbey declined somewhat under her rule. The rebuilding of Essen Minster was delayed, though recent research suggests that it was Sophia who initiated the remodelling of the Enamel Cross.

Death

She ruled her abbeys successfully until her death in 1039. Despite being helped by the sisters, Conrad II denied Adelheid's request to succeed Sophia as Abbess of Gandersheim. Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor, eventually granted her the right to rule Gandersheim too.[2][3]

Ancestry

References

  1. Seibert, Hubertus (1998). Otto II. Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB) Volume 19 (in German). Historische Kommission, Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften (BAdW). pp. 660–662.
  2. 1 2 Wolfram; Kaiser, Herwig; Denise Adele (2006). Conrad II, 990-1039: emperor of three kingdoms. Penn State Press. ISBN 0-271-02738-X. Retrieved 2009-07-09.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Bernhardt, John W. (2002). Itinerant Kingship and Royal Monasteries in Early Medieval Germany, C.936-1075. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-52183-1. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  4. 1 2 Eckenstein, Lina (1894). Women under Monasticism. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 2009-07-11.
Sophia I, Abbess of Gandersheim
Born: 975 Died: 30 January 983
Religious titles
Preceded by
Gerberga II
Abbess of Gandersheim
1002–1039
Succeeded by
Adelaide II
Preceded by
Mathilde
Abbess of Essen
1011–1039
Succeeded by
Theophanu
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