(October 16)
✠ St. Hedwig of Silesia ✠
Widow:
Born: 1174 AD
Andechs, Bavaria, Holy Roman Empire
Died: October 15, 1243 (Aged 68–69)
Trzebnica Abbey, Silesia, Poland
Venerated in: Roman Catholic Church
Canonized: March 26, 1267
Pope Clement IV
Major shrine:
Andechs Abbey and St. Hedwig's
Cathedral in Berlin
Feast: October 16
Patronage:
Andechs Abbey, Brandenburg, Berlin,
Kraków, Poland, Silesia, Its capital Wrocław, Trzebnica, The Roman Catholic
Diocese of Görlitz, Orphans
Saint Hedwig of Silesia, also Saint
Hedwig of Andechs, a member of the Bavarian comital House of Andechs, was
Duchess of Silesia from 1201 and of Greater Poland from 1231 as well as High
Duchess consort of Poland from 1232 until 1238. She was reported in the
two-volume historical atlas of Herman Kinder and another author to have been
great in war and defended from the Teutonic Knights. She was canonized by the
Catholic Church in 1267.
Life:
The daughter of Count Berthold IV of
Andechs and his second wife Agnes of Wettin, she was born at Andechs Castle in
the Duchy of Bavaria. Her elder sister, Agnes married King Philip II of France
(annulled in 1200) and her sister, Gertrude (killed in 1213) King Andrew II of
Hungary, while the youngest Matilda, (Mechtild) became abbess at the
Benedictine Abbey of Kitzingen in Franconia, where Hedwig also received her
education. Hedwig's brother was Bishop Ekbert of Bamberg, Count of
Andechs-Meranien. Another brother was Berthold, Archbishop of Kalocsa und
Patriarch of Aquileia. Through her sister Gertrude, she was the aunt of Saint
Elizabeth of Hungary.
Duchess consort:
At the age of twelve, Hedwig married
Henry I the Bearded, son and heir of the Piast duke Boleslaus the Tall of
Silesia. As soon as Henry succeeded his father in 1201, he had to struggle with
his Piast relatives, at first with his uncle Duke Mieszko IV Tanglefoot who
immediately seized the Upper Silesian Duchy of Opole. In 1206 Henry and his cousin
Duke Władysław III Spindleshanks of Greater Poland agreed to swap the Silesian
Lubusz Land against the Kalisz region, which met with fierce protest by
Władysław's III nephew Władysław Odonic. When Henry went to Gąsawa in 1227 to
meet his Piast cousins, he narrowly saved his life, while High Duke Leszek I
the White was killed by the men of the Pomerelian Duke Swietopelk II,
instigated by Władysław Odonic.
The next year Henry's ally Władysław
III Spindleshanks succeeded Leszek I as High Duke; however as he was still
contested by his nephew in Greater Poland, he made Henry his governor at
Kraków, whereby the Silesian duke once again became entangled in the dispute
over the Seniorate Province. In 1229 he was captured and arrested at Płock
Castle by rivaling Duke Konrad I of Masovia. Hedwig proceeded to Płock pleading
for Henry and was able to have him released.
Her actions promoted the reign of
her husband: Upon the death of the Polish High Duke Władysław III Spindleshanks
in 1231, Henry also became Duke of Greater Poland and the next year prevailed
as High Duke at Kraków. He thereby was the first of the Silesian Piast
descendants of Władysław II the Exile to gain the rule over Silesia and the
Seniorate Province in accord with the 1138 Testament of Bolesław III
Krzywousty.
Widow:
In 1238, upon his death, Henry was
buried at a Cistercian monastery of nuns, Trzebnica Abbey (Kloster Trebnitz),
which he had established in 1202 at Hedwig's request. Hedwig accepted the death
of her beloved husband with faith. She said:
“Would you oppose the will of God? Our
lives are His.”
The widow moved into the monastery,
which was led by her daughter Gertrude, assuming the religious habit of a lay
sister, but she did not take vows. She invited numerous German religious people
from the Holy Roman Empire into the Silesian lands, as well as German settlers
who founded numerous cities, towns and villages in the course of the
Ostsiedlung, while cultivating barren parts of Silesia for agriculture.
Hedwig and Henry had several daughters,
though only one surviving son, Henry II the Pious, who succeeded his father as
Duke of Silesia and Polish High Duke. The widow however had to witness the
killing of her son, vainly awaiting the support of Emperor Frederick II, during
the Mongol invasion of Poland at the Battle of Legnica (Wahlstatt) in 1241. The
hopes for a re-united Poland were lost and even Silesia fragmented into
numerous Piast duchies under Henry II's sons. Hedwig and her daughter-in-law,
Henry II's widow Anna of Bohemia, established a Benedictine abbey at the site
of the battle in Legnickie Pole, settled with monks coming from Opatovice in
Bohemia.
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