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Saint Adelaide of Italy, also called Adelaide of Burgundy (931/932 16 December 999) was perhaps the most prominent
European woman of the 10th century.
She was the daughter of Rudolf II of Burgundy and Bertha of Swabia. Her first marriage, at the age of fifteen, was to
the son of her father's rival in Italy, Lothair II, the nominal King of Italy; the union was part of a political
settlement designed to conclude a peace between her father and Hugh of Provence, the father of Lothair. They had a
daughter, Emma of Italy.
The Calendar of Saints states that her first husband was poisoned by the holder of real power, his successor,
Berengar of Ivrea, who attempted to cement his political power by forcing her to marry his son, Adalbert; when she
refused and fled, she was tracked down and imprisoned for four months at Como. She escaped to the protection, at
Canossa, of Adalbert Atto, where she was besieged by Berengar. She managed to send an emissary to throw herself on
the mercy of Otto the Great of Germany. His brothers were equally willing to save the heiress of Italy, but Otto got
an army into the field: they subsequently met at the old Lombard capital of Pavia and were married in 951; he was
crowned Emperor in Rome, 2 February 962 by Pope John XII, and, most unusually, she was crowned Empress at the same
ceremony. Among their children, four lived to maturity: Henry, born in 952; Bruno, born 953; Matilda, Abbess of
Quedlinburg, born about 954; and Otto II, later Holy Roman Emperor, born 955.
In Germany, the crushing of a revolt in 953 by Liudolf, Otto's son by his first marriage, cemented the position of
Adelaide, who retained all her dower lands. She accompanied Otto in 966 on his third expedition to Italy, where she
remained with him for six years.
When her husband Otto I died in 973 he was succeeded by their son Otto II, and Adelaide for some years exercised a
powerful influence at court. Later, however, her daughter-in-law, the Byzantine princess Theophano, turned her
husband Otto II against his mother, and she was driven from court in 978; she lived partly in Italy, and partly with
her brother Conrad, king of Burgundy, by whose mediation she was ultimately reconciled to her son; in 983 Otto
appointed her his viceroy in Italy. However, Otto died the same year, and although both mother and grandmother were
appointed as co-regents for the child-king, Otto III, Theophano forced Adelaide to abdicate and exiled her. When
Theophano died in 991, Adelaide was restored to the regency of her grandson. She was assisted by Willigis, bishop of
Mainz. In 995 Otto III came of age, and Adelaide was free to devote herself exclusively to works of charity, notably
the foundation or restoration of religious houses.
Adelaide had long entertained close relations with Cluny, then the center of the movement for ecclesiastical reform,
and in particular with its abbots Majolus and Odilo. She retired to a monastery she had founded in c. 991 at Selz in
Alsace. Though she never became a nun, she spent the rest of her days there in prayer. On her way to Burgundy to
support her nephew Rudolf III against a rebellion, she died at Selz Abbey on December 16, 999, days short of the
millennium she thought would bring the Second Coming of Christ. She had constantly devoted herself to the service of
the church and peace, and to the empire as guardian of both; she also interested herself in the conversion of the
Slavs. She was thus a principal agentalmost an embodimentof the work of the Catholic Church during the Early Middle
Ages in the construction of the religion-culture of western Europe. Her feast day, December 16, is still kept in many
German dioceses.
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