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HATTO I

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 63 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HATTO I  . (c . 850–913),

archbishop of Mainz, belonged to a Swabian
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family, and was probably educated at the monastery of
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Reichenau, of which be became abbot in 888 . He soon became known to the German king, Arnulf, who appointed him arch-bishop of Mainz in 891; and he became such a trustworthy and confidential counsellor that he was popularly called " the heart of the king." He presided over the important synod at Tribur in 895, and accompanied the king to Italy in 894 and 895, where he was received with
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great favour by Pope
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Formosus . In 899, when Arnulf died, Hatto became regent of Germany, and
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guardian of the young king, Louis the Child, whose authority he compelled Zwentibold, king of
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Lorraine, an illegitimate son of Arnulf, to recognize . During these years he did not neglect his own interests, for in 896 he secured for himself the abbey of
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Ellwangen and in 898 that of Lorsch . He assisted the Franconian family of the Conradines in its
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feud with the Babenbergs, and was accused of betraying Adalbert, count of
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Babenberg, to
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death . He retained his influence during the whole of the reign of Louis; and on the king's death in 911 was prominent in securing the election of Conrad, duke of Franconia, to the vacant
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throne . When trouble arose between Conrad and Henry, duke of Saxony, afterwards King Henry the Fowler, the attitude of Conrad was ascribed by the
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Saxons to the influence of Hatto, who wished to prevent Henry from securing authority in Thuringia, where the see of Mainz had extensive possessions . He was accused of complicity in a plot to
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murder Duke Henry, who in return ravaged the archiepiscopal lands in Saxony and Thuringia . He died on the 15th of May 913, one tradition saying he was struck by
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lightning, and another that he was thrown alive by the devil into the
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crater of Mount Etna . His memory was long regarded in Saxony with great abhorrence, and stories of cruelty and treachery gathered round his name .

The

legend of the
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Mouse Tower at Bingen is connected with Hatto II., who was archbishop of Mainz from 968 to 970 . This Hatto built . the church of St George on the island of Reichenau, was generous to the see of Mainz and to the abbeys of
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Fulda and Reichenau, and was a
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patron of the chronicler Regino, abbot of Prum . See E . Dummler, Geschichte
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des ostfrankischen Reichs (
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Leipzig, 1887–1888) ; G . Phillips, Die grosse Synode von Tribur (Vienna, 1865) ; .l . Heidemann, Hatto I., Erzbischof von Mainz (Berlin, 1865) ; G . Waltz, Jahrbiicher der deutschen Geschichte unter Heinrich I . (Berlin and Leipzig, 1863) ; and J . F . Bohmer, Regesta archiepiscoporum Maguntinensium, edited by C . Will (
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Innsbruck, 1877–1886) .

End of Article: HATTO I
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JOHN LIPTROT HATTON (1809-1886)

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