Cecilia of Normandy

{{Short description|Anglo-Norman royal and abbess (c. 1056–1126)}}

{{Infobox royalty

| name = Cecilia

| title = Abbess of Holy TrinityThe Ecclesiastical History of England and Normandy, Volume 2. [https://books.google.com/books?id=sXvYAAAAMAAJ&dq=Cecilia+of+Normandy&pg=PA115 Page 115].

| image_size = 140

| image = File:Cécile de Normandie.jpg

| caption = Cecilia depicted on the family tree with her sisters

| house = Normandy

| father = William the Conqueror

| mother = Matilda of Flanders

| birth_date = {{circa|1056}}

| birth_place = Normandy

| death_date = 30 July 1126 (aged 69–70)

| death_place = Caen

}}

{{Commons category|Cecilia of Normandy}}

Cecilia of Normandy (or Cecily; c. 1056 – 30 July 1126) was a French abbess, thought to be the eldest daughterIt is also possible that Adeliza was William's eldest daughter.James Panton. Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy. Page 93. of William the Conqueror and Matilda of Flanders.Lives of the Princesses of England from the Norman Conquest by Mary Anne Everett Green. Pages 1–13.Kenneth J. Panton: Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy, Scarecrow Press, 2011, {{ISBN|978-0810857797}}

Life

She was the sister of William IIDavid C. Douglas: William the Conqueror, p. 395 and Henry I of England. She was very close to her other brother, Robert Curthose.William M. Aird. Robert `Curthose', Duke of Normandy (C. 1050–1134). The acclaimed biography of the eldest son of William the Conqueror, whose failure to secure the kingdom of England has overshadowed his role in capturing Jerusalem during the First Crusade. She was given a high education in the arts, Latin, rhetoric and logic by the scholar Arnulf of Chocques.Tracy Joanne Borman: Queen of the Conqueror: The Life of Matilda, Wife of William I, Bantam Books, 2012

Cecilia was entered into the Abbey of the Holy Trinity of Caen at a young age by her parents.Historia Ecclesiastica by Orderic Vitalis She was placed in the convent in June 1066 at its formal inauguration. The convent was founded by her mother as a penance for her marriage, which was initially regarded as a prohibited degree of kinship, as well as during the preparations of the invasion of England.

To give a child to the church in this manner was common for parents during this time period. A daughter of the nobility was often treated very well. She was allowed her own household and confessor as well as allowed to receive guests in private in her rooms; a far more liberated lifestyle than the one led by most unmarried noblewomen. After having been placed in the convent, she was educated by the abbess Matilda.Churches and Churchmen in Medieval Europe by C. N. L. BrookeThe history of Normandy and of England till 1101, Volume 3 by Francis Palgrave. Page 526.

In 1100, she was visited by her brother Robert Curthose on his return from the First Crusade. He presented her and her abbey with a captured Saracen banner.{{Cite journal|last=TURNER|first=RALPH V.|title=The Children of Anglo-Norman Royalty and Their Upbringing |date=1990|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/45048108|journal=Medieval Prosopography|volume=11|issue=2|pages=17–52|jstor=45048108 |issn=0198-9405}}

Cecilia had a successful career at the convent. Cecilia was possibly the only child to be present on the funeral of her mother in 1083, as it took place in her convent, and no other child is confirmed to have been present. She introduced a number of improvements to the convent and functioned as the coadjutor or deputy of the abbess, her relative Matilda. She succeeded her relative Matilda as Abbess of the Abbey of Sainte-Trinité in Caen in 1112.Douglas: William the Conqueror, pp. 393–395

Her good reputation was described by Baldric of Dol, archbishop of Dol, and the poet Hildebert of Le Mans, who referred to her as "a queen, a goddess and a royal virgin, who married a heavenly husband".

Cecilia died on 30 July 1126 in Caen, France. She was buried within the abbey walls. Her tomb is walled up without any opening being left through which it can be discovered. Her father was also buried in Caen.

References