Bruno of Querfurt
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Saint Bruno of Querfurt | |
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A medieval fresco depicting St. Bruno's death | |
Apostle of the Prussians | |
Born | 970, Querfurt |
Died | February 14, 1009 |
Venerated in | Roman Catholicism |
Feast | October 15 |
Saints Portal |
Saint Bruno of Querfurt (c. 970 – February 14, 1009) (also known as Brun and Boniface[1]) is a sainted missionary bishop and martyr, who was beheaded near the border of Kievan Rus and Lithuania while trying to spread Christianity in Eastern Europe. He is sometimes called the second Apostle of the Old Prussians.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life
Bruno was from a noble family of Querfurt, Saxony. He is rumored to have been a relative of the Holy Roman Emperor Otto III. At the age of six he was sent to be educated in Magdeburg, seat of Adalbert of Magdeburg, the teacher and namesake of Saint Adalbert. While still a youth he was made a canon of Magdeburg cathedral. The fifteen-year-old Otto III made Bruno a part of his royal court. While in Rome for Otto's imperial coronation, Bruno met Adalbert of Prague, the first Apostle of the Prussians, killed a year later, which inspired Bruno to write a biography of Adalbert when he reached the recently Christianized and consolidated Kingdom of Hungary himself. Bruno spent much time at the monastery where Adalbert had become a monk and where abbot John Canaparius may have written a life of Saint Adalbert. Later, Bruno entered a monastery near Ravenna, founded by Otto, and underwent severe ascetic training under the guidance of St. Romuald.
[edit] Missionary life
In Otto III hoped to open a monastery between the Elbe and the Oder (somewhere in the pagan lands that became Brandenburg or Western Pomerania) to help convert the local population into Christianity. In 1003 Pope Sylvester II appointed Bruno, at the age of 33, to head a mission among the pagan peoples of Eastern Europe. Because of a regional conflict between the Henry II, Holy Roman Emperor and Duke Boleslaus I of Poland he delayed the plans for the monastery, and so Bruno set out for Hungary. There he went to the places that Saint Adalbert of Prague had attended. Bruno tried to convert Ahtum, Duke of Banat, who was an Eastern Orthodox Catholic, but this precipitated a large controversy leading to organized opposition from Orthodox monks. Bruno elected to gracefully exit the region, though he first finished his book, the famous "Life of St. Adalbert", a literary memorial of much worth giving a history of the (relatively recent) conversion of the Hungarians.
After this diplomatic failure, Bruno went to Kiev, where Grand Duke Vladimir I authorized him to make converts among the Pechenegs, semi-nomadic Turkic peoples living between the Danube and the Don rivers. Bruno spent five months there and baptized some thirty adults. He helped to bring about a peace treaty between them and the ruler of Kiev.
Before leaving for Poland, Bruno consecrated a bishop for the Pechenegs. While in Poland he consecrated the first Bishop of Sweden. Bruno found out that his friend Benedict and four companions had been killed by robbers in 1003. Bruno took eyewitness accounts and wrote down a touching history of the so-called Five Martyred Brothers.
[edit] Mission to Prussia and death
In the autumn or at the end of 1008 Bruno and eighteen companions set out to found a mission among the Prussians; they succeeded in converting Netimer, a "king of Prussians", and then traveled to the east, heading very likely towards Yotvingia subordinated to Kievan Rus since 983, but in the point of intersection of the borders of Prussia, Kievan Rus and Lithuania[2] Bruno was beheaded on February 14, 1009, meanwhile most of his companions were hanged on the same day (according to Bruno's companion Wibert, Bruno was killed by "a duke" of some part of Prussia). Duke Boleslaus brought the bodies to Poland (it is supposed that that they were laid in Przemyśl, where some historians place Bruno's diocese; true such localization of the Bruno's burial place is hardly probably because Przemyśl belonged to ortodox Kievan Rus in 1009 and even until 1018). Annals of Magdeburg, Thietmar of Merseburg's Chronicle, Works of Magdeburg Bishops, Annals of Quedlinburg and many other written sources of XI-XV centuries recorded the story.
Soon after his death Bruno and his companions were revered as martyrs and Saint Bruno was canonized (it is said that Braunsberg was named after Bruno).
[edit] References
- ^ Nihil Obstat, November 1, 1908. St. Bruno of Querfurt. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume III. Published 1908. New York: Robert Appleton Company.. Retrieved on 2008-05-08.
- ^ According to the Annals of Magdeburg (c. 1170) and some other sources.