- Benno II of Osnabrück
Benno II,
Bishop of Osnabrück was born atLuningen inSwabia and died27 July 1088 , in the Benedictinemonastery of Iburg nearOsnabrück .His parents sent him at an early age to the monastic school of
Strasburg where the learnedHerman Contractus ofReichenau was then teaching. Having completed his education and made a pilgrimage toPalestine , he taught for some time atSpeyer in Rhenish Bavaria.On account of his skill in architecture he was made imperial architect by
Emperor Henry III and, as such, supervised the construction of numerous castles and churches in the empire. When theRhine , which flowed close to theCathedral of Speyer , threatened to undermine its foundations, Benno saved the structure by changing the course of the river.In 1047 he became teacher at the Benedictine school of
Goslar (Hanover ) and, shortly after, was made head master of the cathedral school atHildesheim . In 1051 he accompaniedAzelin ,bishop of Hildesheim , on the emperor's Hungarian campaign and upon his return was made provost of theCathedral of Hildesheim andarchpriest at Goslar.In 1069 Benno was consecrated Bishop of Osnabrück, then vacant through the death of
Benno I . During the conflict betweenPope Gregory VII andEmperor Henry IV , Benno for a long time sided with the emperor. When, at theSynod of Worms , in 1076, Gregory VII was deposed, Benno, like most other German bishops, signed the formula of deposition and incurred ecclesiastical excommunication. With some other excommunicated bishops, Benno hastened to Italy, where the pope freed them from the ban atCanossa , before Henry himself arrived there.After the emperor's second excommunication, Benno tried to bring about a reconciliation. With
Liemar, Archbishop of Bremen he commissioned the anti-papal polemic ofWido of Osnabrück [I. S. Robinson, "Authority and Resistance in the Investiture Contest: The Polemical Literature of the Late Eleventh Century" p. 152, 159.] , around 1085.He retired to the monastery of Iburg, which he had founded in 1070. In a little house near the monastery he lived according to the rule of the monks during the week, while on Sundays and holydays he assisted at his cathedral in Osnabrück.
Strunck [Westphalia Saneta, Paderborn, 1855.] and Heitemeyer [Die Heiligen Deutschlands, Paderborn, 1889.] include him in the list of saints. Kerler [Die Patronate der Heiligen, Ulm, 1905.] says that he is invoked against
grasshopper s, because he once dispersed them by his prayers.References
*Thyen, Mittheil. Des hist. Vereins zu Osnabruck, IX, 1-243;
*Wattenbach, "Geschichtsquellen im Mittalalter" (Berlin, 1894), II, iii.The most important source is "Vita Bennonis", by Norbert, a contemporary of Benno and third Abbot of Iburg (1085-1117). It is published in
Mon. Germ. Hist. : Script., XII, 58-84. See also Breslau, "Die echte und interpolierte Vita Bennonis" in Neues Archiv der Gesellschaft fur altere deutsche Geschichtskunde (Strasburg, 1902), 77-135.Notes
External link
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02481c.htm "Catholic Encyclopedia" article]
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