Ivo Odonvonzh of the coat of arms of Odrovonzh ( Polish. Iwo Odrowąż , circa 1160 - July 21, 1229 , Modena ) - Chancellor Leszek White (1206-1218), Catholic prelate , Bishop of Krakow from September 28, 1281 to July 21, 1229 [1] , The Archbishop of Gnezna from November 4, 1219 to May 13, 1220.
| Ivo Odrovonzh | ||
|---|---|---|
| Iwo odrowąż | ||
Lithograph, 1867 | ||
| ||
| September 28, 1218 - July 21, 1219 | ||
| Church | Roman catholic church | |
| Predecessor | Bishop Fulco | |
| Successor | Bishop Vincent Kadlubek | |
| ||
| November 4, 1219 - May 13, 1220 | ||
| Church | Roman catholic church | |
| Predecessor | Archbishop Heinrich Gitlich | |
| Successor | Archbishop Vincent of Nyalka | |
| Birth | about 1160 | |
| Death | July 21, 1229 | |
| Buried | ||
| Dynasty | ||
| Father | ||
Biography
Born around 1160 in the gentry family of the Odrovonzh coat of arms. Was the son of Saul Odrovonzha. It is assumed that he was born in the city of Konskie . Odrovoжж spent his childhood in the clan possession (today he is a member of the Štomporków Konški commune of the енwiętokrzyskie voivodship ). In his youth he studied in Paris and Bologna. In 1215, together with the Archbishop of Gnezna, Heinrich Gitlich, he took part in the IV Lateran Council . In 1219 he was appointed Pope Honorius III by the Archbishop of Gniezna, but he soon gave up this post.
From 1206 to 1218 he was Chancellor of the Prince of Krakow from the royal family of Piast Leszek Bely . Subsequently, after the death of Leszek, White supported Henry I in the fight against Conrad I. On September 28, 1218, he was appointed bishop of Kraków. On his initiative, the Church of St. Nicholas was built in the village of Vysotsice .
On November 4, 1219, he was appointed Archbishop of Gnezna. He stayed in this position from November 4, 1219 to May 13, 1220.
In 1220, he invited monks from the Order of the Holy Spirit to Poland, who settled in Prронondnika-Biala (today - one of the districts of Krakow ). He commissioned them to guardianship over the city hospital. In 1223, at his invitation, the first monks of the Dominican monastic order arrived in Poland from Bologna . The first Dominican who arrived in Poland was his relative Jacek Odrowonzh , who in 1594 was declared a saint of the Catholic Church.
He founded a Cistercian monastery in the village of Kaczyce (1222), an abbey in Suleiów and a monastery in Wонchock . The monastery in Kotsitsa later moved to the village of Mogila near Krakow and today is known as the abbey in Mogila (now part of the Kraków district of Nova Huta ). He founded the Norbert monasteries in Gebduwa and Imbramowitz ( the Norbertank monastery ). The priest of the monastery in Imbramowice was his sister Bronislava , who later became the holy Catholic Church.
In 1229 he founded a church in the town of Dalešice . In Krakow, built the Church of the Holy Spirit and the Holy Cross.
He founded the churches of St. James and the Conversion of St. Paul in Sandomír .
He was the owner of a rich library that included 32 codes . According to his will, the library was transferred to the Krakow Cathedral of Saints Stanislav and Wenceslas .
He died on July 21, 1229. His body was buried with the blessing of the Dominican abbot, Vincent, in the Holy Trinity Church in Krakow. Since the beginning of the XIX century among the Krakow Dominicans there is a cult of his worship.
Notes
- ↑ Lars Boje Mortensen (1999). "Some Late Twelfth-Century Examples from Scandinavia, Poland, and Palestine". Medieval Analyzes in Language and Cognition. Acts of the Symposium School of Medieval Philosophy, January 10-13, 1996. Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters. p. 303. ISBN 87-7876-148-4 .
Literature
- Bronisław Geremek (1982). "Poland and the cultural geography of medieval Europe", JK Fedorowicz. Republic of Nobles: Studies in Polish History to 1864. CUP Archive.
- Kościół ss. Norbertanek w Imbramowicach pod wezwaniem w. Apostołów Piotra i Pawła. Wydane przez SS. Norbertanki, Imbramowice, 1998 p. 21. ISBN 0-521-24093-X .
Links
| Predecessor: Bishop Fulco | Diocese of Krakow September 28, 1218 - July 21, 1229 | Successor: Bishop Vincent Kadlubek |
| Predecessor: Archbishop Heinrich Gitlich | Archdiocese of Gniezno November 4, 1219 - May 13, 1220 | Successor: Archbishop Vincent of Nyalka |