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Ursmar

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Saint Ursmar of Lobbes
Ursmar receives holy orders as abbot of Lobbes Abbey in 691, probably by Saint Lambertus, bishop of Maastricht (19th-century relief in the Church of Saint Ursmar in Lobbes)
Born27 July 644
Died18 April 713
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
Feast19 April

Ursmar of Lobbes[note 1] (born 644, died 713) was a missionary bishop in the Meuse and Ardennes region in present-day Belgium, Germany, Luxemburg and France. He was also the first abbot of Lobbes Abbey.

As many missionaries in the 7th and 8th century, he may have been of Irish origin. He was appointed abbot of Lobbes in 691 by the Frankish king Pippin II.[1] He is also credited with the foundation of Aulne Abbey and Wallers Abbey.

Saint Ursmar is a Catholic saint, whose feast day is April 19.[2] His sarcophagus is in the crypt of the parish church in Lobbes (as well as the sarcophagus of his successor, Saint Ermin. A Life was written by Heriger of Lobbes.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Rosamond McKitterick, The New Cambridge Medieval History, II (2005), p. 627.
  2. ^ saintpatrickdc.org
  3. ^ CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Heriger of Lobbes

Notes

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  1. ^ also known as Ursmer or Ursmarus