Beatrice of Lorraine

A miniature of Beatrice from the early twelfth-century manuscript of Donizo’s Vita Mathildis (Codex Vat. Lat. 4922, fol. 30v.). The script at the top reads: Det Deus in claris cameris tibi stare Beatrix (God grant that you rest in celestial chambers, Beatrice).
For a clearer black-and-white image, see here
Line drawing of Beatrice’s seal by Ludovico Antonio Muratori (1738). The original wax seal is still extant and attached to a grant Beatrice made to the church of San Zeno in Verona in 1073. The script around the seal reads: SIS SEMPER FELIX, COTFREDO CARA BEATRIX (Beatrice, dear to Godfrey, may you always be happy).

Beatrice of Bar (also Beatrix) (c. 1017  18 April 1076). She was the daughter of Frederick II, Duke of Upper Lorraine, who was also count of Bar, and Matilda of Swabia. She was married first to Boniface III of Tuscany and later to Godfrey of Lotharingia. Through her marriage to Boniface, she was marchioness of Tuscany from c. 1037/8 to her death in 1076.

Life

After her father died, she and her sister Sophie went to live with their mother's sister, Empress Gisela.[1]

c.1037/8, she became the second wife of Boniface III of Tuscany in a splendid ceremony.[2] She bore him the following children:[3]

Regency

With Boniface's death on 6 May 1052, Beatrice assumed the regency for her son Frederick.[5] In 1054, to give her son the protection she could not militarily provide, she married her cousin, Godfrey, former duke of Lower Lorraine.[6] However, in 1055, the Emperor Henry III arrested Beatrice for marrying a traitor. She was brought to Germany a prisoner while Frederick was summoned to Henry's court at Florence. He refused to go and died before any action was taken against him. The heir of Boniface was now his youngest daughter Matilda, who was imprisoned with her mother.[4]

On the death of Henry, Godfrey was reconciled with his heir, Henry IV, and exiled to Italy with his wife and stepdaughter. In January 1058, as a partisan of the newly elected Pope Nicholas II, Leo de Benedicto had the gates of the Leonine City thrown open for Godfrey and Beatrice. Godfrey immediately possessed the Tiber Island and attacked the Lateran, forcing Benedict X to flee on January 24. Beatrice and Godfrey were allied with the reformers, including Hildebrand and Pope Alexander II, against the emperor. In 1062, Beatrice tried to stop the Antipope Honorius II from reaching Rome, but she failed.

In 1069, Godfrey died. Matilda was of age, yet Beatrice continued to exercise government in her name until the day she died. On 29 August 1071, Beatrice founded the monastery Frassinoro at the Apennine pass of Foce della Radici.

Death

Beatrice’s sarcophagus, now located in the Campo Santo at Pisa.

Beatrice died at Pisa on 18 April 1076.[7] She was buried in the Cathedral of Pisa, in a Late Roman sarcophagus, bearing reliefs illustrating the story of Hippolytus and Phaedra.[8] (Nicola Pisano adapted nude figures for his pulpit in the cathedral from the sarcophagus; they can still be seen in the cathedral.) Beatrice's sarcophagus is now located in the Campo Santo in the cathedral square. The inscription around the sarcophagus, which was added in the eleventh-century for Beatrice, reads:

Quamvis peccatrix sum domna vocata Beatrix
In tumulo missa iaceo quæ comitissa
Quilibet ergo pater noster, det pro mea anima ter.[9]

(“Although a sinner, I was called Lady Beatrice. I lie in this grave who was a countess. Whoever wishes may say three Our Fathers for my soul.”)

Notes

  1. Goez, Beatrix, p. 12; Kagay and Villalon, Crusaders, p.358
  2. Goez, Beatrix, pp. 14ff.
  3. Goez, Beatrix, p. 16
  4. 1 2 The Reform of the Church, J.P. Whitney, The Cambridge Medieval History, Vol. V, ed. J.R. Tanner, C.W. Previte-Orton, Z.N. Brooke, (Cambridge University Press, 1968), 31.
  5. Goez, Beatrix, p. 20
  6. Goez, Beatrix, p. 22.
  7. Goez, Beatrix, p. 32.
  8. Goez, Beatrix, p. 235.
  9. Bertolini, 'Beatrice di Lorena'

Sources

External links

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