Adela of Pfalzel
Saint Adela of Pfalzel | |
---|---|
Born | Unknown |
Died | 735 |
Feast | December 24 |
Saint Adela (? - 735) and her sister Irmina of Oeren (? - c. 716) were possibly two princesses who may have been the daughters of Saint Dagobert II and his Anglo-Saxon wife, but this has largely been disproved. Some have also said Adela was the daughter of Irmina of Oeren.
Family[]
Dagobert acceded to the throne of Austrasia at the age of seven, upon the death of Sigebert III, but was quickly deposed. Dagobert fled to Ireland and returned to Metz in 673 and claimed the throne. During exile, some have said he married an Anglo-Saxon princess named Matilda (or Mechthilde) and had five children, with saints Adela and Irmina among them.[1] However, this story is now believed by many to have been a fabrication.
Life[]
Adela was married and had a child by her husband, Alberic. Alberic died within a few years of the marriage. Despite multiple marriage offers, she chose to take up holy orders. She founded the convent of Palatiolum in lands that were then undeveloped outside of Trier. The site later developed into the town of Pfalzel. She was the second abbess of this convent, after the archbishop' sister Severa, and died on December 24, 735.[2]
Some sources record that she was the grandmother of Gregory of Utrecht.[2]
She shares the feast day of 24 December with her sister Irmina.
References[]
- ^ According to the 8th century Vita Sancti Wilfrithi ("Life of St. Wilfrid"), and also mentioned in one of the versions of the Vita Sancti Arbogasti by Utho Argentinensis.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Dunbar, Agnes B.C. (1904). "St Adela (2)". A Dictionary of Saintly Women. George Bell and sons.
- Englebert, Omer. The Lives of the Saints. Christopher and Anne Fremantle, trans. New York: Barns & Noble, 1998. Nihil obstat 1951.
External links[]
- Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns
- Frankish religious sisters and nuns
- 8th-century Christian saints
- 735 deaths
- 8th-century Christian nuns
- 8th-century Frankish saints
- 8th-century Frankish women
- Colombanian saints