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Oda of Meinersen

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Oda of Meinersen
Seal of Abbess Oda of Gernrode
Abbess of Gernrode
Reign1248 – 1260
PredecessorErmengarde I of Gernrode
SuccessorGertrude I of Gernrode
Diedc.1260
Gernrode Abbey

Oda of Meinersen (b. before 1228; d. c.1260) was the abbess of Gernrode (r.1248-1260).

Life

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Oda was a member of a noble dynasty from Lower Saxony, the Meinersen. Oda's parents are unknown,[1] but her brother, Burchard, was the vicedominus of the bishops of Halberstadt between 1227 and 1269.[2]

Oda is only mentioned in documents issued in 1248 and 1249. She was abbess of Gernrode by 30 June 1248, on which date she is named in a charter issued by Archbishop Wilbrand of Magdeburg, which records the payment of interest to the Apostolic Camera.[3]

A charter issued in 1249 dealt with the settlement of a dispute between Oda and the convent of Gernrode about the sale of two golden tablets. The tablets had been donated to the convent by Henry I of Anhalt. The charter was witnessed by three members of the convent, including the provost, Gertrude I of Anhalt, who was Henry I's daughter, and would succeed Oda as abbess of Gernrode after 1260.[4]

Notes

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  1. ^ Przybilla, Die Edelherren von Meinersen, p. 94.
  2. ^ Schulze, Das Stift Gernrode, p. 46.
  3. ^ von Heinemann, Geschichte der Abtei, p. 19.
  4. ^ Heinemann, Geschichte der Abtei, p. 19.

Literature

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  • Andreas Popperodt: Historia Ecclesiae Gerenrodenses 1560, erste Fassung bei Johann Christoph Bekmann in Accesiones Historia Anhaltinae 1716 als Annales Gernrodensis.
  • O. von Heinemann, Geschichte der Abtei und Beschreibung der Stiftskirche zu Gernrode. (H. C. Huch, Quedlinburg 1877).
  • H.K. Schulze, Das Stift Gernrode. Unter Verwendung eines Manuskriptes von Reinhold Specht. Mit einem kunstgeschichtlichen Beitrag von Günther W. Vorbrodt. (Mitteldeutsche Forschungen Bd. 38), Böhlau, Köln 1965.
  • H. Hartung: Zur Vergangenheit von Gernrode (Carl Mittag, Gernrode 1912).
  • P. Przybilla, et al., Die Edelherren von Meinersen: Genealogie, Herrschaft und Besitz vom 12. bis zum 14. Jahrhundert (Hahnsche, 2007).
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