Norbert
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Saint Norbert (c. 1080 – 6 June 1134) was a Christian saint and founder of the Nobertine or Premonstratensian order of canons.
He was born at Kanten on the left bank of the Rhine, near Wesel. His father, Heribert, Count of Gennep, was related to the imperial house of Germany, and his house of Lorraine. Ordained subdeacon, Norbert was appointed to a canonry at Kanten. Soon after he was summoned to the Court of Frederick of Cologne, and later to that of Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor, whose almoner he became.
In 1115 Norbert founded the Abbey of Fürstenberg, endowed it with a portion of his property, and made it over to Cono of Siegburg and his Benedictine successors. He was ordained priest soon afterwards and preached in France and Belgium.
At the Council of Reims in October 1119 Pope Calixtus II requested Norbert to found a religious order in the Diocese of Laon. Norbert chose a valley in the Forest of Coucy, about ten miles from Laon, named Prémontré. Hugh of Fosses, Evermode of Cambray, Antony of Nivelles, seven students of the celebrated school of Anselm, and Ralph at Laon were his first disciples. The young community at first lived in huts of wood and clay, arranged like a camp around the chapel of Saint John the Baptist, but they soon built a larger church and a monastery for the religious who joined them in increasing numbers. Going to Cologne to obtain relics for their church, Norbert is said to have discovered through a vision, the spot where those of Saint Ursula and her companions, of Saint Gereon, and of other martyrs lay hidden.
Norbert gain adherents in Germany, France and Belgium, and houses of his order were founded in Floreffe, Viviers, St-Josse, Ardenne, Cuissy, Laon, Liège, Antwerp, Varlar, Kappenberg and elsewhere.
In the schism following the election of Pope Innocent II in 1130, Norbert supported Innocent and resisted Antipope Anacletus II. In his last years he was chancellor and advisor to Lothair II, Holy Roman Emperor. He died in Magdeburg on 6 June 1134 and was buried in the Norbertine Abbey there, though his remains were later tranferred to the Norbertine Abbey in Prague where they remain to this day.
He was canonized by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582.
References
- St Norbert (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11100b.htm) from the Catholic Encyclopedia.