Misc. Notes
Liudolf (born about 805, died 12 March 864 or 866) was a
Saxon count, son of one count (Graf) Brun (Brunhart)
[1] and his wife Gisla von Verla
[2] ; later authors called him duke of the Eastern Saxons (dux orientalis Saxonum, probably since 850) and count of
Eastphalia. Liudolf had extended possessions in eastern Saxony, and was a leader (dux) in the wars of King
Louis the German against
Normans and
Slavs. The ruling
Liudolfing House, also known as the Ottonian dynasty, is named after him; he is its oldest verified member.
Before 830 Liudolf married Oda, daughter of a
Frankish princeps named
Billung and his wife Aeda. Oda died on 17 May 913, supposedly at the age of 107.
[3]They had six children:
[4] • Brun • Otto the Illustrious, father of
Henry the Fowler • Liutgard married King
Louis the Younger in 874.
[5] • Hathumoda, became an abbess
• Gerberga, became an abbess
• Christina, became an abess
[6]By marrying a Frankish nobleman's daughter, Liudolf followed suggestions set forth by
Charlemagne about ensuring the integrity of the
Frankish Empire in the aftermath of the
Saxon Wars through marriage.
In 845/846, Liudolf and his wife traveled to
Rome in order to ask
Pope Sergius II for permission to found a house of secular canonesses, duly established at their
proprietary church in Brunshausen around 852, and moved in 881 to form
Gandersheim Abbey. Liudolf's minor daughter Hathumod became the first
abbess.
Liudolf is buried in Brunshausen.
[edit] Notes
1. ^ The Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol 24, Ed. Hugh Chisholm, (1911), 268.
2. ^ de:Liudolf (Sachsen) 3. ^ Saint Odilo (Abbot of Cluny), Queenship and sanctity: The lives of Mathilda and The epitaph of Adelheid, translated by Sean Gilsdorf, (Catholic University of America Press, 2004), 24.
4. ^ Althoff, Gerd, Christopher Carroll, Family, friends and followers: political and social bonds in medieval Europe, (Cambridge University Press, 2004), 38.
5. ^ The rise of the medieval world, 500-1300: a biographical dictionary, Ed. Jana K. Schulman , (Greenwood Press, 2002), 271.
6. ^ The rise of the medieval world, 500-1300: a biographical dictionary, 271.