Everything about Willigis totally explained
Saint Willigis (c. 940 in
Schöningen -
February 23,
1011) was an
Archbishop of Mainz, and a statesman as well as a churchman.
The able and intelligent Willigis received a good education, and was recommended by
Volkold,
Bishop of Meissen, to the service of
Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor. From 971 Willigis served as chancellor to the Emperor. Emperor
Otto II in 975 made him Archbishop of Mainz and Archchancellor of the Empire. Soon he started to build the great
cathedral of Mainz.
Willigis demanded solid learning in his clergy too. He was known as a good and fluent speaker. In March, 975, he received the pallium from
Pope Benedict VII and as Primate of Germany, at Christmas, 983, he crowned
Otto III, Holy Roman Emperor at
Aachen, and in June, 1002, crowned
Henry II at Mainz.
After the death of Otto II in
983 and his wife
Theophanu in
991, Willigis became guardian for the minor Otto III until he reached his majority in 994; thus making Willigis together with Otto's grandmother
Adelaide of Italy de facto regent of the empire between 991 and 994.
Willigis presided at the
Synod of Frankfort, 1007, at which thirty-five bishops signed the Bull of
John XVIII for the erection of the
Diocese of Bamberg. He stood in friendly relations with Rome, though the Papacy stood at its nadir. In 996 he was in the retinue of Otto III on his journey to Italy, assisted at the consecration of
Pope Gregory V and at the synod convened a few days later. In this synod Willigis strongly urged the return of St.
Adalbert to Prague. Willigis had probably consecrated the first
bishop of Prague,
Thietmar (January, 976), at
Brumath in Alsace, and had consecrated Adalbert. The latter, unable to bear the conflicts within his see, left his diocese and was, after much correspondence between the
Holy See and Willigis, forced to return.
In 997 Gregory V sent the decrees of a synod of
Pavia to Willigis, "his vicar", for publication.
These friendly relations were somewhat disturbed by the dispute of Willigis with the
Bishop of Hildesheim about jurisdiction in the convent at
Gandersheim. The convent was originally situated at Brunshausen in the Diocese of Hildesheim, but was transferred to Gandersheim, within the territorial limits of Mainz. Both bishops claimed jurisdiction, but then
Pope Silvester II declared in favour of Hildesheim, to Willigis' initial resistance.
In his diocese he laboured by building bridges, constructing roads, and fostering commerce. In Mainz he built a
cathedral and consecrated it on
29 August 1009, in honour of St. Martin, but on the same day, disastrously, it was destroyed by fire; he greatly helped the restoration of the old
Collegiate Church of St. Victor and built that of
St. Stephan. He also built a church at
Brunnen, in Nassau. He showed great solicitude for the religious, and substantially aided the monasteries of Bleidenstadt, St. Disibod, and Jechaburg in Thuringia. Due to the fact that the cathedral still wasn't rebuilt, he was buried after death in the Church of St. Stephan.
His protegé was the scholarly and just
Burchard, bishop of Worms.
Roman Catholics celebrate his feast on
February 23, the day of his death.
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