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{{confused|Saint Audomar}}

{{Infobox saint
{{Infobox saint
|honorific_prefix=Saint
|name=Saint Othmar (or Otmar)
|name=Othmar (or Otmar)
|honorific_suffix=O.S.B.
|birth_date=c. 689
|birth_date=c. 689
|death_date=c. 759
|death_date=c. 759 (aged 69-70)
|feast_day=[[16 November]]
|feast_day=16 November
|venerated_in=
|venerated_in=[[Roman Catholic Church]],
[[Eastern Orthodox Church]]
|image=Otmar von St-Gallen2.jpg
|image=Otmar von St-Gallen2.jpg
|imagesize=
|imagesize=
|caption=Saint Othmar
|caption=
|birth_place=supposedly near [[Saint Gallen]]
|birth_place=supposedly near [[Saint Gallen]], now in [[Switzerland]]
|death_place=[[Isle of Werd]]
|death_place=[[Werd (Lake Constance)|Werd Island]], [[Lake Constance]], now in Switzerland
|titles=
|titles=
|beatified_date=
|beatified_date=
Line 15: Line 20:
|beatified_by=
|beatified_by=
|canonized_date=864
|canonized_date=864
|canonized_place=
|canonized_place=[[Konstanz|Constance]], now in [[Germany]]
|canonized_by=
|canonized_by=[[Solomon I, Bishop of Constance]]
|attributes=Bishop's Staff and wine barrel
|attributes=[[Crozier]] and wine barrel
|patronage=City of Saint Gall (together with [[Saint Gallus]])
|patronage=City of Saint Gall (together with [[Saint Gallus]])
|major_shrine=Saint Gallen
|major_shrine=Saint Gallen
Line 25: Line 30:
|prayer_attrib=
|prayer_attrib=
}}
}}
'''St. Othmar''' (c. 689 – c. 759) was a priest appointed as the first [[abbot]] of the [[Abbey of St. Gall]], a [[Benedictine]] monastery in [[St. Gallen|St. Gall, Switzerland]]. He rebuilt the hermitage [[Saint Gall|Gallus]] left behind and is called the founder of the monastery. He introduced the [[Benedictine rule]], which should be in effect until the closure of the monastery in 1805. It is also assumed that he founded the monastery school of the abbey, which shall become the foundation upon which the famous ''Stiftsbibliothek'' (Monastery library) was built.
'''Othmar''', (also ''Audomar'', c. 689 – c. 759) was a Medieval [[monk]] and [[Catholic priest|priest]]. He served as the first [[abbot]] of the [[Abbey of St. Gall]], a [[Order of St. Benedict|Benedictine]] [[monastery]] near where the city of [[St. Gallen]], now in Switzerland, developed.


==Life==
He died as an exile on the small island of Werd in Lake Constance on false accusations by two neighboring nobles. His feast day is November 16.<ref>[http://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=799 St. Othmar - Catholic Online<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> He is buried in St. Gallen, where he had been taken secretly ten years after his death. It is said that his body was still completelly intact when he was taken over Lake Constance to the town of [[Steinach, St. Gallen|Steinach]] and further to St. Gallen. As the weather was really bad when his men rowed his body over the sea, they became extremelly thirsty. Legends say that the only barrel of [[wine]] they had left would not become empty, regardless of how much they drank. Therefore the wine barrel became one of his attributes (beside the Bishop's staff, as first abbot of the monastery).
Othmar was of Alemannic descent, received his education at the cathedral school in [[Chur]] in Rhaetia. He was ordained priest, and for a time presided over a church of [[Florinus of Remüs|St. Florinus]] in Rhaetia.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=9apNAAAAMAAJ&dq=Saint+Othmar&pg=PA260 ''The Swiss Monthly'', Volume 4, October 1926, p. 260]</ref> This church was probably identical with the one of St. Peter at [[Ramosch|Remus]], where Florinus had laboured as a priest and was buried. <ref name=Ott>[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11351a.htm Ott, Michael. "St. Othmar." The Catholic Encyclopedia] Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 24 November 2021 {{PD-notice}}</ref>

In 720 Waltram of Thurgau appointed Othmar superior over the cell of [[Saint Gall|St. Gall]] and custodian of Gall's relics.<ref name=Strong>[https://www.biblicalcyclopedia.com/O/othmar-st.html ''The Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature''. (James Strong and John McClintock, eds.) Harper and Brothers; NY; 1880]</ref> Othmar united into a [[Abbey of Saint Gall|monastery]] the monks that lived about the cell of St. Gall, according to the [[Columbanus#Rule of Saint Columbanus|Rule of St. Columban]], and became their first abbot. He added a hospital and a school, which became the foundation upon which the famous ''Stiftsbibliothek'' (Monastery library) was built.

In 747, as a part of the reform movement of Church institutions in [[Alamannia]], he introduced the [[Benedictine Rule]],<ref name=Ott/> which was to remain in effect until the [[secularization]] and closure of the monastery in 1805. Othmar also provided for the needs of the surrounding community, building an [[almshouse]] as well as the first [[leprosarium]] in what is now Switzerland, as well as others in France and Germany.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=EJICAAAAYAAJ&dq=Saint+Othmar&pg=PA315 ''Saint Louis Medical and Surgical Journal'', Volume 83, 1902, p. 315]</ref>

When [[Carloman (mayor of the palace)|Carloman]] renounced his throne in 747, he visited Othmar at St. Gall and gave him a letter to his brother [[Pepin the Short|Pepin]], recommending Othmar and his monastery to the king's liberality. Othmar personally brought the letter to Pepin, and was kindly received.<ref name=Ott/>

In 759, Counts Warin and Ruodhart tried to gain possession of some property belonging to St. Gall, Othmar fearlessly resisted their demands. Hereupon they captured him while he was on a journey to Constance, and held him prisoner, first at the castle of Bodmann, then on the island of [[Werd (Lake Constance)|Werd]] in the Rhine. At the latter place he died, after an imprisonment of six months, and was buried.<ref name=Schaffhauserland>[https://schaffhauserland.ch/en/english/pim-detail/st-othmar-s-chapel-werd-island-d17c585c-10cf-4fda-ad6c-6a238b06b4b1.html "St. Othmar’s Chapel - Werd Island", Schaffhauserland Tourismus]</ref>

==Veneration==
[[File:Gallen Abbey Night.png|thumb|Collegiate Church of St. Gall and Othmar]]
Othmar's cult began to spread soon after his death, and next to Maurice and Gall, he is one of the most popular saint in Switzerland. In 769 his body was transferred to the monastery of St. Gall.<ref name=Strong/> As the weather was very hot, when the men rowed his body over the lake, they became extremely thirsty. Legends say that the only barrel of [[wine]] they had left did not become empty, regardless of how much they drank. Therefore, the wine barrel became one of his attributes.

His cult was officially recognized in 864 by [[Solomon I (bishop of Constance)]]. In 867 he was solemnly entombed in the new church of St. Othmar at St. Gall. His feast is celebrated on 16 November. He is represented in art as a Benedictine abbot, generally holding a little barrel in his hand, an allusion to the alleged miracle, that a barrel of Othmar never became empty, no matter how much he took from it to give to the poor.
[[File:Werdinsel Kapelle.JPG|thumb|Werdinsel Kapelle]]

== Legacy ==
[[St. Gallen Cathedral]] is dedicated to Gall and Othmar. In the 10th century, St. Othmar chapel on Werd island was erected in his memory.<ref name=Schaffhauserland/>

There is a church named for St. Othmar in [[Mödling]], Austria. The Pro-Cathedral of St. Mary in [[Bismarck, North Dakota]] holds a reliquary containing some relics of St. Othmar.<ref>[https://stmarysbismarck.org/saints-in-our-reliquary "Saints in our Reliquary", Pro-Cathedral of St. Mary, Bismarck, North Dakota]</ref>


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
{{Catholic|wstitle=St. Othmar}}

{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Othmar
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| DATE OF BIRTH = 689
| PLACE OF BIRTH = supposedly near [[Saint Gallen]]
| DATE OF DEATH = 759
| PLACE OF DEATH = [[Isle of Werd]]
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Othmar}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Othmar}}
[[Category:Abbots of Saint Gall]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic saints]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic saints]]
[[Category:689 births]]
[[Category:680s births]]
[[Category:759 deaths]]
[[Category:750s deaths]]
[[Category:Swiss people who died in prison custody]]
[[Category:Year of birth uncertain]]
[[Category:Year of death uncertain]]
[[Category:8th-century Christian saints]]
[[Category:8th-century Christian saints]]
[[Category:Founders of Catholic religious communities]]



{{saint-stub}}
{{saint-stub}}

[[als:St. Otmar]]
[[ca:Otmar de Sankt Gallen]]
[[de:Otmar von St. Gallen]]
[[it:Otmar di San Gallo]]
[[nl:Odomar van Sankt Gallen]]
[[ru:Отмар Галленский]]

Latest revision as of 22:32, 24 September 2023

Saint

Othmar (or Otmar)

O.S.B.
Bornc. 689
supposedly near Saint Gallen, now in Switzerland
Diedc. 759 (aged 69-70)
Werd Island, Lake Constance, now in Switzerland
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church
Canonized864, Constance, now in Germany by Solomon I, Bishop of Constance
Major shrineSaint Gallen
Feast16 November
AttributesCrozier and wine barrel
PatronageCity of Saint Gall (together with Saint Gallus)

Othmar, (also Audomar, c. 689 – c. 759) was a Medieval monk and priest. He served as the first abbot of the Abbey of St. Gall, a Benedictine monastery near where the city of St. Gallen, now in Switzerland, developed.

Life

[edit]

Othmar was of Alemannic descent, received his education at the cathedral school in Chur in Rhaetia. He was ordained priest, and for a time presided over a church of St. Florinus in Rhaetia.[1] This church was probably identical with the one of St. Peter at Remus, where Florinus had laboured as a priest and was buried. [2]

In 720 Waltram of Thurgau appointed Othmar superior over the cell of St. Gall and custodian of Gall's relics.[3] Othmar united into a monastery the monks that lived about the cell of St. Gall, according to the Rule of St. Columban, and became their first abbot. He added a hospital and a school, which became the foundation upon which the famous Stiftsbibliothek (Monastery library) was built.

In 747, as a part of the reform movement of Church institutions in Alamannia, he introduced the Benedictine Rule,[2] which was to remain in effect until the secularization and closure of the monastery in 1805. Othmar also provided for the needs of the surrounding community, building an almshouse as well as the first leprosarium in what is now Switzerland, as well as others in France and Germany.[4]

When Carloman renounced his throne in 747, he visited Othmar at St. Gall and gave him a letter to his brother Pepin, recommending Othmar and his monastery to the king's liberality. Othmar personally brought the letter to Pepin, and was kindly received.[2]

In 759, Counts Warin and Ruodhart tried to gain possession of some property belonging to St. Gall, Othmar fearlessly resisted their demands. Hereupon they captured him while he was on a journey to Constance, and held him prisoner, first at the castle of Bodmann, then on the island of Werd in the Rhine. At the latter place he died, after an imprisonment of six months, and was buried.[5]

Veneration

[edit]
Collegiate Church of St. Gall and Othmar

Othmar's cult began to spread soon after his death, and next to Maurice and Gall, he is one of the most popular saint in Switzerland. In 769 his body was transferred to the monastery of St. Gall.[3] As the weather was very hot, when the men rowed his body over the lake, they became extremely thirsty. Legends say that the only barrel of wine they had left did not become empty, regardless of how much they drank. Therefore, the wine barrel became one of his attributes.

His cult was officially recognized in 864 by Solomon I (bishop of Constance). In 867 he was solemnly entombed in the new church of St. Othmar at St. Gall. His feast is celebrated on 16 November. He is represented in art as a Benedictine abbot, generally holding a little barrel in his hand, an allusion to the alleged miracle, that a barrel of Othmar never became empty, no matter how much he took from it to give to the poor.

Werdinsel Kapelle

Legacy

[edit]

St. Gallen Cathedral is dedicated to Gall and Othmar. In the 10th century, St. Othmar chapel on Werd island was erected in his memory.[5]

There is a church named for St. Othmar in Mödling, Austria. The Pro-Cathedral of St. Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota holds a reliquary containing some relics of St. Othmar.[6]

References

[edit]

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Othmar". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.