- Liutbert, Archbishop of Mainz
Liutbert or Ludbert (died 889) was the
Archbishop of Mainz from 863 until his death. He also becameAbbot ofEllwangen in 874 and is reckoned the first Archchancellor of Germany. He was one of the major organisers — along withHenry of Franconia — of the vigorous and successful defence ofEast Francia againstViking attack during his last decade. [Reuter, "Germany", 106 and 118. MacLean, 44–45.]In 870, Liutbert became the archchaplain of
Louis the German until 876 and thereafter ofLouis the Younger until the latter's death in 882. [MacLean, 25.] UnderCharles the Fat , however, he did not retain this position, rather it was preserved forLiutward of Vercelli . Liutbert did not accept his lack of position at court initially; he had himself referred to as "archchaplain," though he was not, in an 882 document ofWeissenburg , another abbey of which he was abbot. [Ibid, 26.]The "
Annales Fuldenses ", from about the 860s, was being written in the circle of Liutbert and after 882 until 887 (the so-called "Mainz continuation") under his supervision. [Ibid, 25. Reuter, "AF", 8–9.] Because of the demotion he had suffered after the accession of Charles the Fat to all East Francia in 882, Liubert was a partisan opponent of the emperor's. It has even been suggested that the Mainz "Annales"' depiction of Liutbert and Liutward bears resemblance to the figures ofMordecai andHaman in theBook of Esther . [MacLean, 30, based on the work of Geneviève Bührer-Thierry.] Liutbert was also an opponent of Charles' plan to make his heir his bastard son Bernard. [Ibid, 130.]In 871, the Moravians rebelled against Frankish overlordship and the
Sorbs along theElbe followed suit. An army under Liutbert's command defeated them atWaldaha (Vltava or Moldau). [Thompson, 614.] In 883, when Vikings sailed up theRhine and took a great deal of plunder, Liutbert met them with a small force and retrieved their booty. [MacLean, 38.] He also rebuiltCologne , which they had damaged. In late 884, the Vikings attackedWest Francia and wintered inHesbaye . Early in 885, in a campaign organised by Charles the Fat, Liutbert and Henry of Franconia surprised the Vikings and set them to flight. [Ibid, 39.]Early in 887, Charles the Fat was forced to dismiss his chaplain and chancellor Liutward and replace him with Liutbert at the behest of the
Alemannia ns. [Reuter, "Germany", 119.] After regaining his high post, Liutbert's attitude toward the emperor significantly improved and he was able to draw more imperial largesse toFranconia . [MacLean, 98.]ources
*" [http://www.medievalsources.co.uk/fulda.htm The Annals of Fulda] ". (Manchester Medieval series, Ninth-Century Histories, Volume II.)
Reuter, Timothy (trans.) Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1992.
*Reuter, Timothy. "Germany in the Early Middle Ages 800–1056". New York: Longman, 1991.
*MacLean, Simon. "Kingship and Politics in the Late Ninth Century: Charles the Fat and the end of the Carolingian Empire". Cambridge University Press: 2003.
*Thompson, James Westfall. "Feudal Germany, Volume II". New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 1928.Notes
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