Bertha of Bingen#Rupert of Bingen

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{{Infobox saint

|name=Saint Bertha of Bingen

|birth_date= unknown

|death_date= 757

|feast_day=15 May

|venerated_in=Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church

|image= Bertha von Bingen.jpg

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Saint Bertha of Bingen (German: Heilige Berta, died {{Circa|757}}) was the mother of Rupert of Bingen. Her biography was written, and subsequently her cult popularized, by Hildegard of Bingen, who lived in the same region, about four hundred years later.[http://www.santiebeati.it/dettaglio/92398 Borrelli, Antonio. "Beata Berta di Bingen", Santi e Beati] Bertha and Rupert share a feast day on 15 May.

Bertha of Bingen

Bertha was a descendant of the dukes of Lorraine, and had considerable property along the rivers Rhine and Nahe. She married Robolaus, a pagan, who died when their son Rupert was three years old. Bertha then retired to today's Rupertsberg with her son and the priest Wigbert. She built a small church and led a secluded life with much vigilance and fasting, gave the needy some of her wealth and gradually gathered other people to follow her example.{{Cite web |title=BERTHA VON BINGEN |url=https://bistum-augsburg.de/Heilige-des-Tages/Heilige/BERTHA-VON-BINGEN |access-date=2023-08-21 |website=Bistum Augsburg |language=de}}

Bertha devoted her energy to educating Rupert. Following a pilgrimage to Rome, she gave away the rest of her possessions and came to live near Bingen (called Rupertsberg after her son). Rupert died at age 20, but Bertha outlived him by 25 years{{Cite book |last=Saint Hildegard |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hveMDSLm5G4C&dq=Saint+Bertha+of+Bingen&pg=PA294 |title=Symphonia: A Critical Edition of the Symphonia armonie celestium revelationum [Symphony of the Harmony of Celestial Revelations] |date=1998 |publisher=Cornell University Press |others=Contributions by Barbara Newman |isbn=978-0-8014-8547-3 |edition=2nd |pages=294 |language=en}} spent in prayer, fasting, and good works.

{{Infobox saint

|name=Saint Rupert of Bingen

|birth_date= 712

|death_date= 732

|feast_day=15 May

|venerated_in=Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church

|image=Pilgertafel Heiliger Rupert.jpg

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Rupert of Bingen

Rupert of Bingen (German : Rupert von Bingen) (712–732) was the son of Bertha of Bingen, a Christian noblewoman. His father was a pagan called Robolaus (Robold). After his death, their child was raised as a Christian by his mother.{{Cite web |date=2006-12-20 |title=Den hellige Rupert av Bingen (712-~732) |trans-title=Saint Rupert of Bingen (712{{endash}}~732) |url=https://www.katolsk.no/biografier/historisk/rubingen |access-date=2023-08-21 |website=Den katolske kirke |language=no}}

At the age of fifteen, Rupert undertook a pilgrimage to Rome with his mother. After his return, he used his inherited wealth to found churches, living with his mother on a hill at the river Nahe, near Bingen that came to be called the "Rupertsberg". There they established several hospices for the poor and needy. Rupert died from a fever, aged 20. He is regarded as a patron saint of pilgrims.

Veneration

The little church on the Rupertsberg became a place of pilgrimage and was still standing when Hildegard founded a monastery there around 1150. Hildegard moved, with her nuns, from Disibodenberg to the Rupertsberg, a crag at the confluence of the Nahe and the Rhine, and established a monastery on the site of the ruined castle, where Bertha and Rupert were buried. The Vita Sancti Ruperti{{Cite book |last=Throop |first=Priscilla |title=Three Lives and a Rule |publisher=MedievalMS |year=2010 |asin=B00588E3EI}} was written about this time, "[…] to revive the cult of St. Rupert and to legitimize the vision that called her to move there".{{Cite book |last=King-Lenzmeier |first=Anne H. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cQoSn3LPgUkC&dq=saint+bertha+of+bingen&pg=PA122 |title=Hildegard of Bingen: An Integrated Vision |date=2001 |publisher=The Liturgical Press |isbn=978-0-8146-5842-0 |pages=122 |language=en}}

The monastery at Rupertsberg was destroyed in 1632, during the Thirty Years' War. Their relics were transferred to Eibingen. Bertha's head is kept in the Hildegard Church; Rupert's arm is on display in a reliquary in Eibingen church. Other relics were brought back to Bingen in 1814, where they are venerated in the chapel on the Rochusberg.

Rupertsberg

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Rupertsberg was a crag at the confluence of the Nahe and the Rhine, in Bingen am Rhein. It is named for Saint Rupert of Bingen, son of Bertha of Bingen. It is notable as the site of the first convent founded by Saint Hildegard of Bingen, in 1150, after leaving the monastery at Disibodenberg. She acquired the land from Hermann, dean of Mainz, and Count Bernhard of Hildesheim, plus various smaller gifts. The convent chapel was consecrated by Archbishop Henry of Mainz in 1152. The charters were drawn up in 1158 by Archbishop Arnold of Mainz. In 1171, Archbishop Christian of Mainz extended tax concessions to the convent.{{Cite book |last=Schipperges |first=Heinrich |title=The World of Hildegard of Bingen: Her Life, Times and Visions |publisher=The Liturgical Press |year=1998 |pages=31–32}} The ruins of the monastery were destroyed to make way for a railway track in 1857.

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Sources

  • Herbert J. Thurston and Donald Attwater, eds. Butler's Lives of the Saints, vol. 2. Allen, TX: Christian Classics, 1956. Page 322.
  • Anne H. King-Lenzmeier: Hildegard of Bingen: An Integrated Vision. Liturgical Press, Colledgeville 2001, {{ISBN|0-8146-5842-3}}, S. 122.

Literature

  • Werner Lauter: Rupert von Bingen. In: Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL). Band 8, Bautz, Herzberg 1994, {{ISBN|3-88309-053-0}}, Sp. 1018–1021.
  • Ernst Probst: Hildegard von Bingen - Die deutsche Prophetin. GRIN, München/Ravensburg 2010, {{ISBN|3-640-68859-7}}, S. 19, 20 & 52.