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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › RichardisRichardis - Wikipedia

    Saint Richardis ( Latin: Richgardis, Richardis ), also known as Richgard, Richardis of Swabia and Richarde de Souabe in French ( c. 840 – 18 September, between 894 and 896 AD), was the Holy Roman Empress as the wife of Charles the Fat. She was renowned for her piety and was the first abbess of Andlau.

  2. Jan 6, 2024 · Last Updated on January 6, 2024 by Kittredge Cherry. Hildegard of Bingen was a medieval German mystic, poet, artist, composer, healer and scientist — and likely lesbian. She loved another nun named Richardis and wrote with ecstasy about the Virgin Mary. She celebrated God’s green web of life as “viriditas.”.

  3. Meaning & History. Germanic name, possibly a feminine form of Ricohard, though it is likely the second element is gart "enclosure" (being more common as a second element in feminine names). This was the name of the 9th-century wife of the Frankish emperor Charles the Fat. She is regarded as a saint.

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  5. Hildegard of Bingen (1098–September 17, 1179) was a medieval mystic and visionary and Abbess of Bingen's Benedictine community. She was also a prolific composer and the author of several books on spirituality, visions, medicine, health and nutrition, nature.

  6. Richardis von Stade (1124(?) – 29 October 1152) was a German nun and Benedictine abbess of Bassum Abbey. She was a member of the Udonids family as the daughter of Rudolf I, Margrave of the Nordmark and Richardis; and the sister of Hartwig, Count of Stade and Archbishop of Bremen, and Lutgard of Salzwedel, Queen consort of Denmark, Adelheid ...

  7. www.wikiwand.com › en › RichardisRichardis - Wikiwand

    Saint Richardis, also known as Richgard, Richardis of Swabia and Richarde de Souabe in French, was the Holy Roman Empress as the wife of Charles the Fat. She was renowned for her piety and was the first abbess of Andlau. Repudiated by her husband, Richardis later became a Christian model of devotion and just rule. She was canonised in 1049.

  8. In 1151, soon after (or immediately before) the completion of the Scivias, Hildegard experienced the greatest personal loss of her life. It was a terrible blow, coming, as it did, suddenly and, apparently, unexpectedly from a totally unanticipated source.

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