Engilbert II of Saint Gall
Engilbert II (died 13 August 934) was a
Engilbert cannot be unequivocally identified before his abbacy because several monks with the same name appear in the profession book
Engilbert is first attested as abbot on 21 September 925.
During Engilbert's abbacy in May 926, a major Hungarian raid passed through Swabia.[1] His preemptive measures helped mitigate the damage to the monastery and its inhabitants. He ordered the construction of two castles for the protection of the inhabitants.[3] The elderly and the children were sent for safety to Wasserburg across Lake Constance, while the library was removed to Reichenau Island and the monks took refuge in a fortress on the river Sitter.[1] The legend of Saint Wiborada takes place before and during this Hungarian invasion.
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f Werner Vogler, Engilbert in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland, 2006-04-07.
- ^ Mayke De Jong, In Samuel's Image: Child Oblation in the Early Medieval West (E. J. Brill, 1996), p. 105: "St Gall habitually registered every newly professed monk into a special codex ... [N]ew monks of St Gall personally wrote out their vow in the profession book..."
- ^ a b c d Werner Vogler, "Kurzbiographien der Äbte", in Johannes Duft, Anton Gössi and Werner Vogler (eds.), Die Abtei St. Gallen (St. Gallen, 1986), p. 113.
- ^ Gössi, p. 113, on the other hand, has him elected abbot after 21 September 925 and first mentioned as abbot on 26 May 926.