Waltrude
Saint Waltrude | |
---|---|
Roman Catholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church | |
Feast | April 9 |
Patronage | Mons |
Saint Waltrude (
Life
Waltrude was born in
Waltrude married
- Aldetrude, abbess of Maubeuge Abbey
- Landry of Paris, Bishop of Paris
- Madelberte of Maubeuge, succeeded Aldetrude as abbess of Mauberge
- Dentelin[3]
Around 642 Madelgarius founded a monasteries at Hautmont. Waltrude persuaded Saint Ghislain to establish an oratory at a place called Ursidongus, now known as Saint-Ghislain.[4] The city of Mons grew around it.
Around 656, after the death of the young Dentelin, the couple decided to separate and retire to separate monasteries. Madelgarius went to Hautmont, where he became a Benedictine monk. Hidulf of Hainault, husband of her cousin Aye, built her a cell and chapel near Ghislain's oratory.[2] She was sometimes visited by her sister Aldegonde of Maubeuge.[5]
Her biography celebrates her for "the pious intention under vow to free captives. She arranged the ransom price [pretium], weighed out the silver. ... When the captives had been bought back with the ransom money out of her own purse, at her command they returned to their families and homes."[6]
Veneration
Upon her death, established by tradition as falling on 9 April 688, Waltrude was proclaimed holy by the vox populi. Waltrude is the patron saint of the city of Mons.[3]
The shrine of Saint Waltrude is kept in the Saint Waltrude Collegiate Church in Mons. Each year, as part of the Ducasse de Mons festival, the shrine is placed on the car d'or, a gilded cart, and drawn by horses through the city streets.
Both her parents (Walbert and Bertille) and her sister (
References
- ^ Butler, Alban. The Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and Other Principal Saints James Duffy, 1866, p. 66 This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- ^ a b Dunbar, Agnes Baillie Cunninghame. A Dictionary of Saintly Women, Volume 2, Bell, 1905, p. 298
- ^ a b "Waltrude, her life and her works", Wallonia tourism
- ^ Van der Essen, Léon. "St. Ghislain." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 6. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1909. 3 December 2021 This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- ^ Steele, Francesca Maria. Anchoresses of the West, Sands, 1903, p. 183
- ISBN 0-226-74054-4. p. 76.