Ingrid of Skänninge


Ingrid Elovsodtter

Bornc. 1220
Died9 September 1282
Skänninge, Sweden
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Church of Sweden[1]
Beatified16 March 1499 (cultus confirmation)[2], Old Saint Peter's Basilica, Papal States by Pope Alexander VI
Major shrineSkänninge Abbey
Feast2 September

Ingrid of Skänninge (died 9 September 1282) was a Swedish prioress. She founded Skänninge Abbey, a nunnery belonging to the Order of Preachers, in 1272. Her feast day is on 2 September.[3]

Life

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Ingrid was the daughter of Elof, a nobleman from Östergötland. She was a member of the family Elofssönernas ätt, and belonged to the elite of the Swedish nobility.[4] She had at least two brothers, Anders and Johan, the latter of whom was a knight of the Teutonic Order. Her niece, Kristina Johansdotter (d. 1293), was the first spouse of Birger Persson, who became the father of Bridget of Sweden in his second marriage. It is believed that Ingrid was an inspiration of Bridget.

Ingrid married a nobleman referred to as Sir Sigge, who likely died in 1271. After being widowed, Ingrid and her sister Kristina became a part of a circle of pious females around the Dominican friar Petrus de Dacia in Skänninge. In one of his letters, Petrus de Dacia has left a description of the ascetic life style and mystic revelations of one of his "spiritual daughters" in this circle of women, which likely refers to Ingrid.[5]

In 1272, this circle of women formed a convent under the leadership of Ingrid by adopting the habit of the Dominicans and practising its rules.[4] Ingrid made pilgrimages to Santiago de Compostela, Jerusalem and Rome. After the death of her sister, Ingrid applied for formal recognition of her convent. This was granted in 1281, a year before her death.

Veneration

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After her death in 1282, Ingrid's remains became objects of veneration and pilgrimages to the convent. It is possible that her fellow nuns regarded her as a saint already at the time of her death.[4] At the Council of Constance, an application was made for her beatification. In 1499, Pope Alexander VI agreed to the translation of her relics, which took place in Skänninge Abbey in 1507.

Legacy

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Following the Swedish Reformation, the remains of Ingrid were removed to Vadstena Abbey. In 1645, the skull was stolen from Vadstena church by Antoine de Beaulieu, who believed it to be the skull of Bridget of Sweden. Antoine de Beaulieu gave Ingrid's skull to the French ambassador Gaspard Coignet de la Thullerie, who in turn placed it in the Church of Courson-les-Carrières in France. In 1959, it was given to the Bridgettine abbey of Mary's Refuge in Uden, where it was exhibited as a relic of Bridget of Sweden.[6][7]

References

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  1. ^ "Helgon- och minnesdagar i Domkyrkan".
  2. ^ "Confirmation of Cultus". newsaints.faithweb.com. Retrieved 1 April 2023.
  3. ^ "St. Ingrid of Sweden – Catholic Online, Saints & Angels".
  4. ^ a b c "Ingrid of Skänninge", Mapping Saints
  5. ^ Ingrid Elofsdotter, urn:sbl:11967, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (art av Jarl Gallén), hämtad 2015-04-13.
  6. ^ Birgittas stulna skalle, en kriminalgåta på väg att lösas?, Barbro Lindqvist, Signum
  7. ^ DNA skriver historia – Forskning & Framsteg

Further reading

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  • Carlquist, Gunnar, red (1932). Svensk uppslagsbok. Bd 13. Malmö: Svensk Uppslagsbok AB. sid. 1097
  • DNA skriver historia – Forskning & Framsteg
  • Birgittas stulna skalle, en kriminalgåta på väg att lösas? – Barbro Lindqvist, Signum
  • Ingrid Elofsdotter (Elofssönernas ätt) i Wilhelmina Stålberg, Anteckningar om svenska qvinnor (1864)
  • Ingrid Elofsdotter, urn:sbl:11967, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (art av Jarl Gallén), hämtad 2015-04-13.
  • Hinnebusch, Frederick. "Ingrid - Saint of Oblivion", Dominicana