Online Encyclopedia

MATILDA (1046-1115)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 889 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

MATILDA (1046-1115)  , countess or margravine of Tuscany, popularly known as the
See also:
Great Countess, was descended from a noble Lombard
See also:
family . Her great-grandfather, Athone of
See also:
Canossa, had been made count of Modena and Reggio by the emperor
See also:
Otto I., and her grandfather had, in addition, acquired Mantua,
See also:
Ferrara and Brescia . Her own
See also:
father, Boniface II.; the Pious, secured Tuscany, the duchy of Spoleto, the county of
See also:
Parma, and probably that of Cremona; and was loyal to the emperor until 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 Italy . She received an excellent
See also:
education under the care of her
See also:
mother,
See also:
Beatrice of Bar, the daughter of Frederick of
See also:
Lorraine and aunt of Henry III., who, after a brief detention in Germany by the emperor, married Godfrey IV. of Lorraine, brother of Pope Stephen IX . (1057-1058) . Thenceforth Matilda's lot was cast against the emperor in the great struggle over investiture, and for over
See also:
thirty years she maintained the cause of the successive pontiffs, Gregory VII., Victor III., Urban II., Paschal II., with varying fortune, but with undaunted
See also:
resolution . She aided the pope against the
See also:
Normans in 1074, and in 1075 attended the synod at which Guibert was condemned and deprived of the archbishopric of 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 asylum for Henry's second wife, Praxides, and urged his son Conrad to revolt. against his father . In the course of the protracted struggle her villages were plundered, her fortresses demolished, and 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Holy See, originally made in 1077 and renewed on the 17th of November 1102, though never fully consummated on account of imperial opposition, constituted the greater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 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 German fluently, and wrote many Latin letters; she collected a considerable library; she supervised an edition of the Pandects of Justinian; and Anselm of 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 church at Polirone, whence her remains were taken to Rome by order of Urban VIII. in 1635 and interred in St Peter's . The contemporary record of Matilda's life in 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 Duff, Matilda of Tuscany (1910) . % (C . H .

End of Article: MATILDA (1046-1115)
[back]
KARL MATHY (1807-1868)
[next]
MATILDA (1102-1164)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.