Mother: THEOPANO of Byzantine |
In France Louis V had died without heirs, and Hugh Capet was
elected. This was the work of the French episcopate. Theophano
was not able to prevent France from speedily freeing herself
from German influence. The regent endeavoured to watch over the
national questions of the Empire in the East. One of the
greatest achievements of this empress was her success in
maintaining feudal supremacy over Bohemia.
After her death, the less capable Adelaide assumed the regency.
Unlike her predecessor, hers was not a nature fitted to rule;
the Slavs rose on the eastern border, and the Normans were with
difficulty held in check. She died in 999. The influence of
these two women upon the education of the young king (who
assumed the government in 994) was not slight. But two men
exercised even greater influence on him: Johannes Nonentula, a
protégé of Theophano, and Bernward of Hildesheim. The austere
Bernward awakened in him inclinations to fanciful enthusiasm
which coloured his dreams of empire.
Supported by the spiritual princes of the Empire, he marched
into Italy. Here he behaved as though the Roman see were a
metropolitan bishopric under the Empire. He it was who presided
at synods and dared to revoke papal decisions, and who selected
the popes. Like Charlemagne, he was convinced of the spiritual
character of his imperial dignity, and deduced from this the
necessity of setting the empire over the papacy. He raised a
German, Bruno, to the Chair of Peter under the name of Gregory
V. The new pope crowned Otto emperor 21 May, 996, but he did not
act counter to the ancient claims of the Curia, and he
emphasized the duties and rights of the popes.
Otto returned to Germany in 996. It was of the greatest
consequence that in Bruno the papal throne contained a man who
encouraged the ideas of the reform party for purification and
spiritualization within the Church, and a consequent exaltation
of the papacy. Harmonizing with this reform party was the
ascetic movement within the Church, whose principal exponent was
a native of Southern Italy called Nilus. Among his pupils was
the Bohemian, Adalbert, second Bishop of Prague, who was at that
time in Rome devoting himself entirely to mystical and ascetic
enthusiasm. In 996 Otto met this remarkable man whom he
succeeded in sending back to his see. As he scrupled returning
to Bohemia, he went as missionary to the Prussian country, where
he was put to death in 999. The emperor was affected by the
grotesque piety of this man, and it had aroused ascetic
inclinations in him also. Still another person obtained great
influence over him: the learned Frenchman, Gerbert, who came to
the Imperial court in 997.
In Rome, meanwhile, Crescentius had set up an antipope named
John XVI and forced Gregory V to flee. In 998 Otto went to Rome,
where he pronounced severe judgment upon those who had rebelled
against his decisions. Gregory died in 999, and the emperor
raised his friend Gerbert to the papacy as Sylvester II. He too,
followed the ancient path of the Curia, and advocated papal
supremacy over all Christendom. How was this consistent and
energetic policy of the Curia to affect the youthful emperor's
dreams of a fusion of the ideal state with the ideal church in
an Augustan Theocracy? The interference with Italian affairs was
now to react bitterly upon Germany. In 1000 Otto made a
pilgrimage to the tomb of his friend Adelbert at Gnesen, where
he erected an archbishopric destined to promote the emancipation
of the Eastern Slavonians. He practised mortifications at the
tomb of an ascetic, and thrilled with the highest ideas of his
imperial dignity, he afterwards caused the tomb of Charlemagne
at Aix to be opened. Before long his dreams of empire faded
away. Everywhere there was fermentation throughout Italy. Otto,
lingering in Rome, found himself, with the pope, obliged to
abandon the city. In Germany the princes united in a national
opposition to the new imperialism of this capricious sovereign.
He had few supporters in his plan to reconquer the Eternal City.
Only by recourse to arms could his body be brought to Aix, where
recently his tomb has been discovered in the cathedral.
WILMANS, Jahrbücher des Deutschen Reiches unter Ottos III
(Berlin, 1840); BENTZINGER, Das Leben der Kaiserin Adelheid,
Gemahlin Ottos I., während der Regierung Ottos III (Breslau
Dissertation, 1883); OTTO, Papst Gregor V (Münster Dissertation,
1881); LUX, Papst Silvester II Einfluss auf die Politik Kaiser
Ottos III (Breslau, 1898); VOIGT, Adalbert von Prag (Berlin,
1898); SCHULTTESS, Papst Silvester II als Lehrer und Staatsmann
(Hamburg, 1891); ZHARSKI, Die Slavenkriege zur Zeit Ottos III
und die Pilgerfahrt nach Gnesen (Lemberg, 1882)."
F. KAMPERS
Transcribed by Gerald Rossi
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XI
Copyright © 1911 by Robert Appleton Company
_HENRY I "The Fowler" of Rome______________________________+ | (0876 - 0936) m 0909 _OTTO I "The Great" of Germany_____________| | (0912 - 0973) | | |_MATILDA of Oldenburg de RINGELHEIM Countess of Ringelheim_+ | (0880 - 0968) m 0909 _OTTO II Holy Roman Emporer_| | (0955 - 0983) m 0972 | | | _RUDOLF II of Italy________________________________________+ | | | (0888 - 0937) m 0922 | |_ADELAIDE de BURGUNDY of Holy Roman Empire_| | (0932 - 0999) | | |_BERTHA of Swabia__________________________________________+ | (0907 - 0967) m 0922 | |--OTTO III Holy Roman Emporer | (0980 - 1002) | _CONSTANTINE VII of the East Roman Empire__________________+ | | (0905 - 0959) m 0919 | _ROMANUS II East Roman Empire______________| | | (0939 - 0963) | | | |_HELENA____________________________________________________+ | | (0900 - 0962) m 0919 |_THEOPANO of Byzantine______| (0956 - 0991) m 0972 | | ___________________________________________________________ | | |_THEOPHANA of Byzantine____________________| (0940 - ....) | |___________________________________________________________
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Mother: Charlotte IRBY |
_John HODGES Jr._____+ | (1747 - 1790) m 1769 _George HODGES ______| | (1769 - 1851) m 1796| | |_Anna MAGEE _________+ | (1750 - ....) m 1769 _John Alexander HODGES _| | (1816 - 1866) m 1845 | | | _George CHERRY ______+ | | | (1760 - ....) | |_Sarah CHERRY _______| | (1780 - ....) m 1796| | |_ MAGEE _____________+ | (1760 - ....) | |--George HODGES | (1846 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Charlotte IRBY ________| (1828 - 1896) m 1845 | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Mary Margaret SEVIER |
_Samuel MORGAN ____________________+ | (1728 - 1825) _Gideon MORGAN Sr.___| | (1751 - 1830) m 1772| | |_Rachel KIBBE _____________________ | (1730 - 1804) _Gideon MORGAN Jr._____| | (1778 - 1851) m 1813 | | | ___________________________________ | | | | |_Patience COGSWELL __| | (1754 - 1797) m 1772| | |___________________________________ | | |--Rufus Montezuma MORGAN C.S.A. | (1837 - 1862) | _John SEVIER 1st Gov. of Tennessee_+ | | (1745 - 1815) m 1761 | _Joseph SEVIER ______| | | (1763 - 1826) | | | |_Sarah HAWKINS ____________________ | | (1745 - 1780) m 1761 |_Mary Margaret SEVIER _| (1799 - 1862) m 1813 | | _George LOWREY "the Immigrant"_____ | | (1740 - ....) m 1768 |_Elizabeth LOWREY ___| (1772 - ....) | |_Nannie Oo-Lu-Tsa__________________+ (1748 - ....) m 1768
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Mother: Martha HALL |
_John WALLER I_______+ | (1645 - 1723) m 1669 _John II WALLER Gent. "the immigrant"_| | (1673 - 1753) m 1696 | | |_Mary KEY ___________+ | (1648 - 1735) m 1669 _Benjamin WALLER Judge_| | (1716 - 1786) m 1746 | | | _____________________ | | | | |_Dorothy (Dorothea) KING _____________| | (1675 - 1759) m 1696 | | |_____________________ | | |--Robert WALLER | (1749 - 1749) | _____________________ | | | _Robert HALL _________________________| | | (1700 - ....) | | | |_____________________ | | |_Martha HALL __________| (1728 - 1780) m 1746 | | _____________________ | | |_Mary TUCKER _________________________| (1700 - ....) | |_____________________
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Mother: Mary Virginia FIELD |
__ | __| | | | |__ | _James Love WILSON ___| | (1840 - 1897) m 1863 | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--Lillian May WILSON | (1864 - 1943) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |_Mary Virginia FIELD _| (1842 - 1928) m 1863 | | __ | | |__| | |__
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