'Saint Conrad of Constance' (b. c.
900–
26 Nov 975) was a bishop and saint.
Life
Conrad was a member of the powerful
Welf family, son of Count Heinrich of
Altdorf. After an education at the cathedral school in
Constance, he became provost of
Constance Cathedral and in 934 was made
Bishop of Constance.
It is counted as one of his achievements that he avoided becoming enmeshed in the politics of the day and reserved his energies for his episcopal duties. He was nevertheless close to
Emperor Otto I, whom he accompanied to
Italy in 962. Conrad made three pilgrimages to
Jerusalem as well as a number to
Rome. He founded a number of churches on the episcopal estates and the hospital at
Kreuzlingen, named after a portion of the
True Cross which Conrad brought back from
Jerusalem and presented to it.
Veneration
His cult was entirely due to the efforts of Bishop Ulrich I of Dillingen, Bishop of Constance (1111-1127). The ''Vita'' of Conrad was written in about 1120 by Udalschalk, a monk of
St. Ulrich's and St. Afra's Abbey, Augsburg, of which he later became abbot (1124 or 1127 to c. 1150 or 1151). Its late date doubtless accounts for its lack of content, notwithstanding which, Conrad was canonised at the
First Lateran Council in 1123.
His feast day in 26 November.
Iconography
Saint Conrad is sometimes represented as a bishop holding a chalice with a spider in it or over it. This refers to a story that once when he was celebrating mass a spider fell into the chalice. Spiders were believed at that time to be deadly poisonous, but Conrad nevertheless drank the wine, with the spider in it, as a token of faith.
Sources
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BBK Lexikon: Konrad von Konstanz
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St. Patrick's Church: Conrad of Constance