Cancor
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
Cancor (died 771) was a Frankish count associated with Lorsch Abbey. He was son of a noble lady Williswinda.
As her only known husband before she was widowed was named Robert, it has been proposed that Cancor was son to Robert I, Count of Hesbaye,[1] who was also alive in the 8th century.
In 764, together with his widowed mother Williswinda, Cancor founded Lorsch Abbey as a proprietary church and monastery on their estate, Laurissa (Lorsch).[2] They entrusted its government to Cancor's cousin Chrodegang, Bishop of Metz. Chrodegang dedicated the church and monastery to Saint Peter and became its first abbot. The founders later enriched the new abbey by further donations.
In 766, shortly before his death, Chrodegang resigned as Abbot of Lorsch owing to his other important duties as Bishop of Metz. He then sent his brother Gundeland, another nephew of Cancor, to Lorsch as his successor.
According to one source,[which?] Cancor was probably related to the Robertians. This is because his father's name may have been Rodbert.[3] Robert may have been his brother or his nephew.
Cancor married a noblewoman named Angila,[4] of unknown parentage, probably before 766. Cancor and Angila had four children:
- Heimrich, Count in the Upper Rheingau (d. 5 May 795),[4] Count in the Upper Rheingau, who died in the Battle of Lüne and the Elbe, a campaign in Charlemagne’s Saxon Wars
- Embert (d. 803), Bishop of Worms, 770-803
- Rachilt (d. after 1 November 792),[4] Nun at Lorsch
- Euphemia,[4] Nun at Lorsch.
Cancor was succeeded as Count of Hesbaye by his brother Thuringbert.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ Riché 1993, p. 371.
- ^ Innes 2004, p. 51,53.
- ^ Williswanda's late husband's name is mentioned in the Lorsch necrology: [1]. This is cited by at least one modern secondary source, here (Bouchard): p.188
- ^ a b c d Innes 2004, p. 52.
Sources
[edit]- Innes, Matthew (2004). State and Society in the Early Middle Ages: The Middle Rhine Valley, 400–1000. Cambridge University Press.
- Riché, Pierre (1993). The Carolingians, a Family who Forged Europe. Translated by Allen, Michael Idomir. University of Pennsylvania Press.
- Chrondegand, in The Catholic Encyclopedia (1913)
- Bouchard, Constance Brittain (2015). Rewriting Saints and Ancestors: Memory and Forgetting in France, 500-1200. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812290080.