fbpx
Wikipedia

Ansgar

Ansgar (8 September 801 – 3 February 865), also known as Anskar,[4] Saint Ansgar, Saint Anschar or Oscar, was Archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen in the northern part of the Kingdom of the East Franks. Ansgar became known as the "Apostle of the North" because of his travels and the See of Hamburg received the missionary mandate to bring Christianity to Northern Europe.[5][6]

Saint

Ansgar
A depiction of Saint Ansgar by Siegfried Bendixen from the Church Trinitatis, in Hamburg, Germany
Apostle of the North
Born8 September 801
Corbie, Frankish Kingdom
Died3 February 865(865-02-03) (aged 63)
Bremen, East Francia
Venerated inCatholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church[1]
Anglican Communion[2]
Lutheranism[3]
Feast3 February
AttributesDressed in archbishop's attire with a model of the church

Life edit

Ansgar was the son of a noble Frankish family, born near Amiens (present day France).[6][7] After his mother's early death, Ansgar was brought up in Benedictine monastery of Corbie in Picardy.[6] According to the Vita Ansgarii ("Life of Ansgar"), when the little boy learned in a vision that his mother was in the company of Mary, mother of Jesus, his careless attitude toward spiritual matters changed to seriousness.[8] His pupil, successor, and eventual biographer Rimbert considered the visions (of which this was the first) to have been Ansgar's main life motivator.

Ansgar acted in the context of the phase of Christianization of Saxony (present day Northern Germany) begun by Charlemagne and continued by Charlemagne's son and successor, Louis the Pious. In 822 Ansgar became one of many missionaries sent to found the abbey of Corvey (New Corbie) in Westphalia, where he became a teacher and preacher. A group of monks including Ansgar were sent further north to Jutland with the king Harald Klak, who had received baptism during his exile. With Harald's downfall in 827 and Ansgar's companion Autbert having died, their school for the sons of courtiers closed and Ansgar returned to Germany. Then in 829, after the Swedish king Björn at Hauge requested missionaries for his Swedes, King Louis sent Ansgar, now accompanied by friar Witmar from New Corbie as his assistant. Ansgar preached and made converts, particularly during six months at Birka, on Lake Mälaren, where the wealthy widow Mor Frideborg extended hospitality. Ansgar organized a small congregation with her and the king's steward, Hergeir, as its most prominent members.

In 831 Ansgar returned to Louis' court at Worms and was appointed to the Archbishopric of Hamburg-Bremen. This was a new archbishopric, incorporating the bishoprics of Bremen and Verden and with the right to send missions into all the northern lands, as well as to consecrate bishops for them. Ansgar received the mission of evangelizing pagan Denmark, Norway and Sweden. The King of Sweden decided to cast lots as to whether to admit the Christian missionaries into his kingdom. Ansgar recommended the issue to the care of God, and the lot was favorable.[6] Ansgar was consecrated as a bishop in November 831, with the approval of Gregory IV. Before traveling north once again, Ansgar traveled to Rome to receive the pallium directly from the pope's hands, and was formally named legate for the northern lands. Ebbo, Archbishop of Reims had previously received a similar commission, but would be deposed twice before his death in 851, and never actually traveled so far north, so the jurisdiction was divided by agreement, with Ebbo retaining Sweden for himself. For a time Ansgar devoted himself to the needs of his own diocese, which was still a missionary territory and had few churches. He founded a monastery and a school in Hamburg. Although intended to serve the Danish mission further north, it accomplished little.

After Louis the Pious died in 840, his empire was divided and Ansgar lost the abbey of Turholt, which Louis had given to endow Ansgar's work. Then in 845, the Danes unexpectedly raided Hamburg, destroying all the church's treasures and books. Ansgar now had neither see nor revenue, and many helpers deserted him. The new king, Louis' third son, Louis the German, did not re-endow Turholt to Ansgar, but in 847 he named the missionary to the vacant diocese of Bremen, where Ansgar moved in 848. However, since Bremen had been suffragan to the Bishop of Cologne, combining the sees of Bremen and Hamburg presented canonical difficulties. After prolonged negotiations, Pope Nicholas I would approve the union of the two dioceses in 864.

Through this political turmoil, Ansgar continued his northern mission. The Danish civil war compelled him to establish good relations with two kings, Horik the Elder and his son, Horik II. Both assisted him until his death; Ansgar was able to secure permission to build a church in Sleswick north of Hamburg and recognition of Christianity as a tolerated religion.[9] Ansgar did not forget the Swedish mission, and spent two years there in person (848–850), averting a threatened pagan reaction. In 854, Ansgar returned to Sweden when king Olof ruled in Birka. According to Rimbert, he was well disposed to Christianity. On a Viking raid to Apuole (current village in Lithuania) in Courland, the Swedes plundered the Curonians.

Death and legacy edit

Ansgar was buried in Bremen in 865. His successor as archbishop, Rimbert, wrote the Vita Ansgarii. He noted that Ansgar wore a rough hair shirt, lived on bread and water, and showed great charity to the poor. Adam of Bremen attributed the Vita et miracula of Willehad (first bishop of Bremen) to Ansgar in Gesta Hammenburgensis ecclesiæ; Ansgar is also the reputed author of a collection of brief prayers Pigmenta (ed. J. M. Lappenberg, Hamburg, 1844).[10] Pope Nicholas I declared Ansgar a saint shortly after the missionary's death. The first actual missionary in Sweden and the Nordic countries (and organizer of the Catholic church therein), Ansgar was later declared "Patron of Scandinavia".[6]

Relics are located in Hamburg in two places: St. Mary's Cathedral (Ger.: Domkirche St. Marien) and St. Ansgar's and St. Bernard's Church (Ger.: St. Ansgar und St. Bernhard Kirche).[11] Statues of Bishop Ansgar stand in Hamburg, Copenhagen and Ribe, as well as a stone cross at Birka. His feast day (Lesser Festival) is 3 February, as it is in the Church of England,[12] the Episcopal Church,[2] and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.[13][14]

Visions edit

 
Saint Ansgar statue in Hamburg

Although a historical document and primary source written by a man whose existence can be proven historically, the Vita Ansgarii ("The Life of Ansgar") aims above all to demonstrate Ansgar's sanctity. It is partly concerned with Ansgar's visions, which, according to the author Rimbert, encouraged and assisted Ansgar's remarkable missionary feats.

Through the course of this work, Ansgar repeatedly embarks on a new stage in his career following a vision. According to Rimbert, his early studies and ensuing devotion to the ascetic life of a monk were inspired by a vision of his mother in the presence of Mary, mother of Jesus. Again, when the Swedish people were left without a priest for some time, he begged King Horik to help him with this problem; then after receiving his consent, consulted with Bishop Gautbert to find a suitable man. The two together sought the approval of King Louis, which he granted when he learned that they were in agreement on the issue. Ansgar was convinced he was commanded by heaven to undertake this mission and was influenced by a vision he received when he was concerned about the journey, in which he met a man who reassured him of his purpose and informed him of a prophet that he would meet, the abbot Adalhard, who would instruct him in what was to happen. In the vision, he searched for and found Adalhard, who commanded, "Islands, listen to me, pay attention, remotest peoples", which Ansgar interpreted as God's will that he go to the Scandinavian countries as "most of that country consisted of islands, and also, when 'I will make you the light of the nations so that my salvation may reach to the ends of the earth' was added, since the end of the world in the north was in Swedish territory".[15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ February 16 / February 3. https://www.holytrinityorthodox.com/htc/orthodox-calendar/
  2. ^ a b "Anskar, Bishop and Missionary, 865". The Episcopal Church. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  3. ^ . Resurrectionpeople.org. Archived from the original on 16 May 2019. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
  4. ^ "Common Worship texts: Festivals". The Church of England. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  5. ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Anschar" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  6. ^ a b c d e Fr. Paolo O. Pirlo, SHMI (1997). "St. Ansgar". My First Book of Saints. Sons of Holy Mary Immaculate – Quality Catholic Publications. p. 41. ISBN 971-91595-4-5.
  7. ^ Farmer, David Hugh (1997). The Oxford dictionary of saints (4 ed.). Oxford [u.a.]: Oxford Univ. Press. p. 25. ISBN 0-19-280058-2.
  8. ^ Rimbert, "Life of Ansgar" at p. 1, English translation available at https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/basis/anskar.asp
  9. ^ Wood, Ian. The Missionary Life: Saints and the Evangelisation of Europe, 400–1050. Great Britain: Longman, 2001. pp. 124–125
  10. ^ Samuel Macauley, ed. (1914). "Ansgar". New Schaff–Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge (third ed.). London and New York: Funk and Wagnalls
  11. ^ "St. Mary's Cathedral in Hamburg, Germany".
  12. ^ "The Calendar". The Church of England. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  13. ^ Evangelical Lutheran Worship Leaders Desk Edition (8th (2019) Printing ed.). Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg Fortress. 2006. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-8066-5620-5.
  14. ^ (PDF). Renewing Worship. January 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 September 2006. Retrieved 14 April 2020.
  15. ^ Rimbert. "Life of Anskar, the Apostle of the North, 801–865". Medieval Sourcebook. New York: Fordham University. Retrieved 18 July 2012.

Further reading edit

  • Jakobsson, Sverrir. Mission Miscarried: The Narrators of the Ninth-Century Missions to Scandinavia and Central Europe. Bulgaria Medievalis 2 (2011), 49–69.
  • Palmer, James T., Rimbert's Vita Anskarii and the Scandinavian Mission in the Ninth Century. Journal of Ecclesiastical History 55/2 (2004), 235–56.
  • Pryce, Mark. Literary Companion to the Festivals: A Poetic Gathering to Accompany Liturgical Celebrations of Commemorations and Festivals. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2003.
  • Tschan, Francis J. History of the Archbishops of Hamburg-Bremen. New York: Columbia University Press, 1959.

External links edit

  • Vita Ansgari, English translation from Medieval sourcebook


Ansgar
Born: 8 September 801 in Amiens or 796 in Corbie Died: 3 February 865 in Bremen
Catholic Church titles
New diocese Archbishop of Hamburg
834–865
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Leuderich
Bishop of Bremen
848–865

ansgar, other, uses, disambiguation, september, february, also, known, anskar, saint, saint, anschar, oscar, archbishop, hamburg, bremen, northern, part, kingdom, east, franks, became, known, apostle, north, because, travels, hamburg, received, missionary, man. For other uses see Ansgar disambiguation Ansgar 8 September 801 3 February 865 also known as Anskar 4 Saint Ansgar Saint Anschar or Oscar was Archbishop of Hamburg Bremen in the northern part of the Kingdom of the East Franks Ansgar became known as the Apostle of the North because of his travels and the See of Hamburg received the missionary mandate to bring Christianity to Northern Europe 5 6 SaintAnsgarA depiction of Saint Ansgar by Siegfried Bendixen from the Church Trinitatis in Hamburg GermanyApostle of the NorthBorn8 September 801Corbie Frankish KingdomDied3 February 865 865 02 03 aged 63 Bremen East FranciaVenerated inCatholic ChurchEastern Orthodox Church 1 Anglican Communion 2 Lutheranism 3 Feast3 FebruaryAttributesDressed in archbishop s attire with a model of the church Contents 1 Life 2 Death and legacy 3 Visions 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife editAnsgar was the son of a noble Frankish family born near Amiens present day France 6 7 After his mother s early death Ansgar was brought up in Benedictine monastery of Corbie in Picardy 6 According to the Vita Ansgarii Life of Ansgar when the little boy learned in a vision that his mother was in the company of Mary mother of Jesus his careless attitude toward spiritual matters changed to seriousness 8 His pupil successor and eventual biographer Rimbert considered the visions of which this was the first to have been Ansgar s main life motivator Ansgar acted in the context of the phase of Christianization of Saxony present day Northern Germany begun by Charlemagne and continued by Charlemagne s son and successor Louis the Pious In 822 Ansgar became one of many missionaries sent to found the abbey of Corvey New Corbie in Westphalia where he became a teacher and preacher A group of monks including Ansgar were sent further north to Jutland with the king Harald Klak who had received baptism during his exile With Harald s downfall in 827 and Ansgar s companion Autbert having died their school for the sons of courtiers closed and Ansgar returned to Germany Then in 829 after the Swedish king Bjorn at Hauge requested missionaries for his Swedes King Louis sent Ansgar now accompanied by friar Witmar from New Corbie as his assistant Ansgar preached and made converts particularly during six months at Birka on Lake Malaren where the wealthy widow Mor Frideborg extended hospitality Ansgar organized a small congregation with her and the king s steward Hergeir as its most prominent members In 831 Ansgar returned to Louis court at Worms and was appointed to the Archbishopric of Hamburg Bremen This was a new archbishopric incorporating the bishoprics of Bremen and Verden and with the right to send missions into all the northern lands as well as to consecrate bishops for them Ansgar received the mission of evangelizing pagan Denmark Norway and Sweden The King of Sweden decided to cast lots as to whether to admit the Christian missionaries into his kingdom Ansgar recommended the issue to the care of God and the lot was favorable 6 Ansgar was consecrated as a bishop in November 831 with the approval of Gregory IV Before traveling north once again Ansgar traveled to Rome to receive the pallium directly from the pope s hands and was formally named legate for the northern lands Ebbo Archbishop of Reims had previously received a similar commission but would be deposed twice before his death in 851 and never actually traveled so far north so the jurisdiction was divided by agreement with Ebbo retaining Sweden for himself For a time Ansgar devoted himself to the needs of his own diocese which was still a missionary territory and had few churches He founded a monastery and a school in Hamburg Although intended to serve the Danish mission further north it accomplished little After Louis the Pious died in 840 his empire was divided and Ansgar lost the abbey of Turholt which Louis had given to endow Ansgar s work Then in 845 the Danes unexpectedly raided Hamburg destroying all the church s treasures and books Ansgar now had neither see nor revenue and many helpers deserted him The new king Louis third son Louis the German did not re endow Turholt to Ansgar but in 847 he named the missionary to the vacant diocese of Bremen where Ansgar moved in 848 However since Bremen had been suffragan to the Bishop of Cologne combining the sees of Bremen and Hamburg presented canonical difficulties After prolonged negotiations Pope Nicholas I would approve the union of the two dioceses in 864 Through this political turmoil Ansgar continued his northern mission The Danish civil war compelled him to establish good relations with two kings Horik the Elder and his son Horik II Both assisted him until his death Ansgar was able to secure permission to build a church in Sleswick north of Hamburg and recognition of Christianity as a tolerated religion 9 Ansgar did not forget the Swedish mission and spent two years there in person 848 850 averting a threatened pagan reaction In 854 Ansgar returned to Sweden when king Olof ruled in Birka According to Rimbert he was well disposed to Christianity On a Viking raid to Apuole current village in Lithuania in Courland the Swedes plundered the Curonians Death and legacy editAnsgar was buried in Bremen in 865 His successor as archbishop Rimbert wrote the Vita Ansgarii He noted that Ansgar wore a rough hair shirt lived on bread and water and showed great charity to the poor Adam of Bremen attributed the Vita et miracula of Willehad first bishop of Bremen to Ansgar in Gesta Hammenburgensis ecclesiae Ansgar is also the reputed author of a collection of brief prayers Pigmenta ed J M Lappenberg Hamburg 1844 10 Pope Nicholas I declared Ansgar a saint shortly after the missionary s death The first actual missionary in Sweden and the Nordic countries and organizer of the Catholic church therein Ansgar was later declared Patron of Scandinavia 6 Relics are located in Hamburg in two places St Mary s Cathedral Ger Domkirche St Marien and St Ansgar s and St Bernard s Church Ger St Ansgar und St Bernhard Kirche 11 Statues of Bishop Ansgar stand in Hamburg Copenhagen and Ribe as well as a stone cross at Birka His feast day Lesser Festival is 3 February as it is in the Church of England 12 the Episcopal Church 2 and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 13 14 Visions edit nbsp Saint Ansgar statue in Hamburg Although a historical document and primary source written by a man whose existence can be proven historically the Vita Ansgarii The Life of Ansgar aims above all to demonstrate Ansgar s sanctity It is partly concerned with Ansgar s visions which according to the author Rimbert encouraged and assisted Ansgar s remarkable missionary feats Through the course of this work Ansgar repeatedly embarks on a new stage in his career following a vision According to Rimbert his early studies and ensuing devotion to the ascetic life of a monk were inspired by a vision of his mother in the presence of Mary mother of Jesus Again when the Swedish people were left without a priest for some time he begged King Horik to help him with this problem then after receiving his consent consulted with Bishop Gautbert to find a suitable man The two together sought the approval of King Louis which he granted when he learned that they were in agreement on the issue Ansgar was convinced he was commanded by heaven to undertake this mission and was influenced by a vision he received when he was concerned about the journey in which he met a man who reassured him of his purpose and informed him of a prophet that he would meet the abbot Adalhard who would instruct him in what was to happen In the vision he searched for and found Adalhard who commanded Islands listen to me pay attention remotest peoples which Ansgar interpreted as God s will that he go to the Scandinavian countries as most of that country consisted of islands and also when I will make you the light of the nations so that my salvation may reach to the ends of the earth was added since the end of the world in the north was in Swedish territory 15 See also editList of Eastern Orthodox saints Calendar of saints Episcopal Church Hochkirchlicher Apostolat St Ansgar Priory of St Ansgar Sankt Ansgar Schule Vita AnsgariiReferences edit February 16 February 3 https www holytrinityorthodox com htc orthodox calendar a b Anskar Bishop and Missionary 865 The Episcopal Church Retrieved 20 July 2022 Notable Lutheran Saints Resurrectionpeople org Archived from the original on 16 May 2019 Retrieved 16 July 2019 Common Worship texts Festivals The Church of England Retrieved 3 February 2015 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 St Anschar Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company a b c d e Fr Paolo O Pirlo SHMI 1997 St Ansgar My First Book of Saints Sons of Holy Mary Immaculate Quality Catholic Publications p 41 ISBN 971 91595 4 5 Farmer David Hugh 1997 The Oxford dictionary of saints 4 ed Oxford u a Oxford Univ Press p 25 ISBN 0 19 280058 2 Rimbert Life of Ansgar at p 1 English translation available at https sourcebooks fordham edu basis anskar asp Wood Ian The Missionary Life Saints and the Evangelisation of Europe 400 1050 Great Britain Longman 2001 pp 124 125 Samuel Macauley ed 1914 Ansgar New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge third ed London and New York Funk and Wagnalls St Mary s Cathedral in Hamburg Germany The Calendar The Church of England Retrieved 27 March 2021 Evangelical Lutheran Worship Leaders Desk Edition 8th 2019 Printing ed Minneapolis MN Augsburg Fortress 2006 p 58 ISBN 978 0 8066 5620 5 The Church Year PDF Renewing Worship January 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 8 September 2006 Retrieved 14 April 2020 Rimbert Life of Anskar the Apostle of the North 801 865 Medieval Sourcebook New York Fordham University Retrieved 18 July 2012 Further reading editJakobsson Sverrir Mission Miscarried The Narrators of the Ninth Century Missions to Scandinavia and Central Europe Bulgaria Medievalis 2 2011 49 69 Palmer James T Rimbert s Vita Anskarii and the Scandinavian Mission in the Ninth Century Journal of Ecclesiastical History 55 2 2004 235 56 Pryce Mark Literary Companion to the Festivals A Poetic Gathering to Accompany Liturgical Celebrations of Commemorations and Festivals Minneapolis Fortress Press 2003 Tschan Francis J History of the Archbishops of Hamburg Bremen New York Columbia University Press 1959 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Ansgar Ansgar at Birka History of Birka Vita Ansgari English translation from Medieval sourcebook German History Forum ANSKAR The Apostle of the North 801 865 Translated from the Vita Anskarii by Bishop Rimbert his fellow missionary and successor BY CHARLES H ROBINSON Im BTM format AnsgarBorn 8 September 801 in Amiens or 796 in Corbie Died 3 February 865 in Bremen Catholic Church titles New diocese Archbishop of Hamburg834 865 Succeeded byRimbert Preceded byLeuderich Bishop of Bremen848 865 Portals nbsp Saints nbsp Biography nbsp Christianity nbsp Europe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ansgar amp oldid 1222975559, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.