• Ansoald (Latin: Ansoaldus) was the bishop of Poitiers from 676 until about 696. Ansoald was probably a Burgundian from the region around Autun. He inherited...
    6 KB (669 words) - 20:15, 31 October 2024
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    treasury of the state as well as key political figures, such as the generals Ansoald and Audon, although many, such as chamberlain Eberul, abandoned her. She...
    27 KB (3,664 words) - 19:05, 18 October 2024
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    he had founded near Rouen. He was welcomed by the bishop of Poitiers, Ansoald, whom he helped to evangelize his diocese, and then withdrew with a few...
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    enemies, and spent a period of exile from Neustria at the court of Bishop Ansoald of Poitiers; afterwards he founded monasteries at Pavilly, Montivilliers...
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    exile from Neustria and withdrew to Austrasia and the court of Bishop Ansoald of Poitiers who put his own foundation of Luçon Abbey under Philibert's...
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    in the full text of the edict hereby cited. It was written down by one Ansoald, a scribe of Lombard origin, and was affirmed by a gairethinx convened...
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    681, the victim of a combined attack of his numerous enemies. In 684, Ansoald, bishop of Poitiers in Neustria, the homeland of Leudesius, commissioned...
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  • Léger, but he did not succeed, the remains of St. Léger being confided to Ansoald, Bishop of Poitiers. His predecessor, St. Aubert of Cambrai, had founded...
    5 KB (589 words) - 16:35, 31 October 2024
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    account of Dagobert's demise. At the time of Dagobert's death, Bishop Ansoald of Poitiers was travelling on a diplomatic mission when he stopped in Sicily...
    14 KB (1,701 words) - 12:29, 8 April 2024
  • Vita sancti Leodegarii. Later authors tell this story: In 684, bishop Ansoald of Poitiers requested of the new abbot Andulf (684–96) that his monks provide...
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    (614–616) Johannes (John) I (attested 627) Dido (Desiderius) (c. 629–c. 669) Ansoald (c. 677 – after 697) Eparchius Maximinus Gaubert Godon de Rochechouart...
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    for every 2,082 Catholics. The monastery of Luçon was founded in 682 by Ansoald, Bishop of Poitiers, who placed it under the government of St. Philibert...
    43 KB (5,794 words) - 07:47, 10 September 2024