- Wala of Corbie
Wala of Corbie (ca. 755 –
31 August 836 ) was the son of Bernard, son ofCharles Martel , and one of the principal advisers of his cousinCharlemagne , Charlemagne's sonLouis the Pious , and his sonLothair I . He succeeded his brother Adalard as abbot ofCorbie andCorvey in 826 or 827.Wala, originally a "
comes " (count) attached to the palace under Charlemagne (811), was forced to enter the monastery of Corbie in 814 as part of a purging of palace rivals and hangers-on by Louis the Pious. [McKitterick, 134.] In 816 he and Adalard were given the responsibility of organising the government of the convent ofHerford , recently passed into Louis's hands at theCouncil of Aachen . [McKitterick, 118.] In the 820s Wala become a strong opponent of royal/imperial control of churchbenefice s. [McKitterick, 122.] He was back at court in 822 as a "concillor" (councillor). According toPaschasius Radbertus , Wala alleged on one occasion that the "army of clerics" (i.e.chaplain s) resident at thePalace of Aachen (and perhaps itinerant with the emperor) served only for personal gain and did not form a legitimate ecclesiastical institution. [McKitterick, 85.] In 831 Wala left Corbie; in 834 he was abbot of Bobbio.References
*McKitterick, Rosamond (1983). "The Frankish Kingdoms under the Carolingians, 751–987". London: Longman. ISBN 0 582 49005 7.
*Riché, Pierre (1993). "The Carolingians: A Family who Forged Europe". Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0 8122 1342 4.Notes
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