Leudinus
Leudinus Bodo[1] was a seventh-century bishop of Toul, successor to Eborinus, or Elbonirus.[2] He was a Benedictine.[3] He occurs in hagiographies.
He is traditionally known as the founder of Bodonis Monasterium (the monastery of Bodo), later called Bon-Moutier (Bonmoutier, Bon Moustiers).[4] Bonmoutier is in the modern Val-et-Châtillon, Vosges.
He is said to have been born around 625, in Bassigny, to Gundoin and Saratrude of the Etichonids, a family of the Austrasian nobility. His sister was Saint Salaberge, who founded the monastery at Laon.[5] He founded also the Abbey of Étival (Stivagium, Abbaye Saint-Pierre d'Étival[6]),[7] dated to 663[8] and the Abbey of Othonville, and died around 678.[9]
References
- Paul Burns (2000), Butler's Lives of the Saints, p. 101.
Notes
- ↑ Leudovinus, Leudvinus, Leudvin, Leudin, Lendin, Saint Bodo, Saint Bodon.
- ↑ http://www.gourment.chez-alice.fr/evequesdetoul.htm
- ↑ OSB. Saints of the Order of Saint Benedict. 1/4
- ↑ Page 3 - Le diocèse de Saint-Dié
- ↑ Catholic Encyclopedia: Nancy
- ↑ fr:Abbaye Saint-Pierre d'Étival
- ↑ Now Étival-Clairefontaine, Vosges;, .
- ↑ http://juillot.home.cern.ch/juillot/salm_ang.html
- ↑ , in French.
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