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MATILDA (1046-1115) , countess or margravine of See also: Tuscany, popularly known as the See also: Great Countess, was descended from a See also: noble Lombard See also: family
.
Her great-grandfather, Athone of See also: Canossa, had been made count of See also: Modena and Reggio by the emperor See also: Otto I., and her grandfather had, in addition, acquired See also: Mantua, See also: Ferrara and See also: Brescia
.
Her own See also: father, Boniface II.; the Pious, secured Tuscany, the duchy of See also: Spoleto, the county of See also: Parma, and probably that of See also: Cremona; and was loyal to the emperor until See also: Henry plotted against him
.
Through the
See also: murder of Count Boniface in 1052 and the See also: death of her older See also: brother and See also: sister three years later, Matilda was See also: left, at the age of nine, See also: sole heiress to the richest estate in See also: Italy
.
She received an excellent See also: education under the care of her See also: mother, See also: Beatrice of See also: Bar, the daughter of See also: Frederick of See also: Lorraine and aunt of Henry III., who, after a brief detention in See also: Germany by the emperor, married Godfrey IV. of Lorraine, brother of See also: Pope See also: Stephen IX
.
(1057-1058)
.
Thenceforth Matilda's See also: lot was cast against the emperor in the great struggle over See also: investiture, and for over See also: thirty years she maintained the cause of the successive pontiffs, See also: Gregory VII., Victor III., See also: Urban II., See also: Paschal II., with varying See also: fortune, but with undaunted See also: resolution
.
She aided the pope against the See also: Normans in 1074, and in 1075 attended the See also: synod at which See also: Guibert was condemned and deprived of the archbishopric of See also: Ravenna
.
Her hereditary See also: fief of Canossa was the scene (See also: Jan
.
28, 1077) of the celebrated penance of Henry IV. before Gregory VII
.
She provided an See also: asylum for Henry's second wife, Praxides, and urged his son See also: Conrad to revolt. against his father
.
In the course of the protracted struggle her villages were plundered, her fortresses demolished, and See also: Pisa and Lucca temporarily lost, but she remained steadfast in her allegiance, and, before her death, had, by means of a See also: league of Lombard cities which she formed, recovered all her possessions
.
The donation of her estates to the See also: Holy See, originally made in 1077 and renewed on the 17th of See also: November 1102, though never fully consummated on account of imperial opposition, constituted the greater See also: part of the temporal dominion of the papacy
.
Matilda was twice married, first to Godfrey V. of Lorraine, surnamed the Hump-backed, who was the son of her step-father and was murdered on the 26th of See also: February 1076; and secondly to the 17-See also: year-old Well V. of See also: Bavaria, from whom she finally separated in 1095—both marriages of policy, which counted for little in her See also: life
.
Matilda was an eager student: she spoke See also: Italian, French and See also: German fluently, and wrote many Latin letters; she collected a considerable library; she supervised an edition of the Pandects of Justinian; and See also: Anselm of See also: Canterbury sent her his Meditations
.
She combined her devotion to the papacy and her learning with very deep See also: personal piety
.
She died after a long illness at Bodeno, near Modena, on the 24th of See also: July 1115, and was buried
in the See also: Benedictine See also: church at Polirone, whence her remains were taken to
See also: Rome by See also: order of Urban VIII. in 1635 and interred in St See also: Peter's
.
The contemporary record of Matilda's life in See also: rude Latin verse, by her See also: chaplain Domnizone (Donizo or Domenico), is preserved in the Vatican Library
.
The best edition is that of Bethmann in the Monumenta germ. his'. scriptores, xii
.
348-409
.
The text, with an Italian See also: translation, was published by F
.
Davoli under the title Vita della granda contessa Matilda di Canossa (Reggio nell' See also: Emilia 1888 seq.)
.
See A
.
Overmann, Grafin Mathilde von Tuscien; ihre Besitzungen
u. ihre Regesten (See also: Innsbruck, 1895); A
.
See also: Colombo, Una Nuova
vita della contessa Matilda in R. accad. d. sci
.
Atti, vol
.
39 (See also: Turin,
1904) ; L
.
Tosti, La Contessa Matilda ed i romani pontefici (Florence,
1859) ; A
.
Pannenborg, Studien zur Geschichte der Herzogin Matilde
von Canossa (See also: Gottingen, 1872) ; F
.
M
.
Fiorentini, Memorie della
Matilda (Lucca, 1756); and See also: Nora See also: Duff, Matilda of Tuscany (1910)
.
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.
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