:''For other uses, see
St. Norbert (disambiguation).''

Saint Norbert of Xanten
'Saint Norbert of Xanten' (c.
1080–
6 June 1134) is a
Christian saint and founder of the Norbertine or
Premonstratensian order of canons regular. He was born at
Gennep on the
Maas or
Xanten on the left bank of the
Rhine, near
Wesel (historians still bother to find out) and grew up and was educated in Xanten (proven fact). His father, Heribert, Count of Gennep, was related to the imperial house of Germany and the house of
Lorraine. His mother was Hedwig of Guise. Ordained as subdeacon, Norbert was appointed to a canonry at Xanten where he lived a life of pleasure. Soon after, he was summoned to the court of
Frederick of Cologne and later to that of
Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor, where he became the emperor's
almoner (a church officer in charge of distributing charity). he avoided ordination to the priesthood and even declined an appointment as bishop of
Cambrai in 1113. Following a near-fatal horse-riding accident, his faith deepened and he renounced his appointment at Court. He returned to Xanten to lead a life of penance, placing himself under the direction of Cono, Abbot of Siegburg. 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 to the priesthood soon afterward.
He attempted to reform the other canons of Xanten, but his asceticism did not sit well with them and they denounced him at the Council of
Fritzlar in 1118. He then resigned his benefice, sold all his property and gave the proceeds to the poor. He visited Pope
Gelasius II, who gave him permission to become an itinerant preacher and he preached throughout northern France, being credited with a number of miracles.
At the
Council of Reims in October,
1119,
Pope Calixtus II requested Norbert to found a religious order in the
Diocese of Laon. In 1120, Norbert chose a valley in the Forest of Coucy (a grant from the Bishop of Laon), about 10 miles from Laon, named
Prémontré. Blessed Hugh of Fosses, St.
Evermode of Ratzeburg, Antony of Nivelles, seven students of the celebrated school of
Anselm, and
Ralph of Laon were among his first thirteen disciples. By the next year the community had grown to 40. They all took their vows and the Order of Canons Regular of Prémontré was founded. 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. In 1125, the constitution for the order was approved by Pope
Honorius II.
Norbert gained adherents in Germany, France, Belgium and Transylvania, and houses of his order were founded in Floreffe, Viviers, St-Josse, Ardenne, Cuissy, Laon, Liège, Antwerp, Varlar, Kappenberg, Grosswardein (
Oradea/
Nagyvarad) and elsewhere. Count
Theobald II of Champagne wanted to enter the new order, but Norbert counseled him to remain a layman and marry. Norbert prepared for him a set of religious practices to follow in his secular life. This was the first instance of a lay
third order (tertiary) known in the Church. He continued to preach throughout France, Belgium and Germany and was successfully in combatting a eucharistic heresy in
Antwerp proposed by one Tanchelm.
Norbert was appointed to the
Archbishopric of Magdeburg by
Pope Honorius II in
1126. Several assassination attempts were made as he began to reform the lax discipline of his see. He was especially vigilant in protecting the Church's rights against the secular power.
In the
schism following the election of
Pope Innocent II in
1130, Norbert supported Innocent and resisted
Antipope Anacletus II. In Norbert's last years, he was chancellor and adviser to
Lothair II, the Holy Roman Emperor, persuading him to lead an army in 1133 to Rome to restore Innocent to the papacy. Norbert died in
Magdeburg on
June 6,
1134, both the canons at the cathedral and the canons at St. Mary's Abbey claiming the body. The two parties resorted to Lothair II who decreed that the body should be buried in the Norbertine Abbey. In 1524, Martin Luther preached in the city as a result of which Magdeburg became a Protestant city. Numerous attempts were made over the centuries by the Abbey of Strahov in
Prague to retrieve the saint's body. Only after several military defeats at the hand of Emperor Ferdinand II was the abbot of Strahov able to claim the body. On May 2, 1627, the body was finally brought to Prague and interred in the abbey where they remain to this day.
He was
canonized by
Pope Gregory XIII in
1582.
References
★
St Norbert from the
Catholic Encyclopedia.