Venerable (Monastic) 8th century

Disibod

c. 619 – c. 700

Also known as Disen of Disibodenberg

An Irish-born monk who went with companions to Germany and founded the monastery on the hill later called Disibodenberg (c. 700)

Feast Day
September 8
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Disibod of Disibodenberg

Come to them for
Missionary Work

Life

Disibod was an Irish-born monk and hermit of the seventh century who, after leaving his homeland, settled in the Rhineland of the Frankish lands and established the monastic community on the hill at the confluence of the Nahe and Glan rivers that afterward bore his name as Disibodenberg. He is commemorated on September 8. His sources place him within the wider movement of Irish ascetics and missionaries who travelled to the Continent in the early medieval period.

Little can be established about Disibod from contemporary record; he is first named in a ninth-century martyrology by Hrabanus Maurus, and the fullest account of his life is the Vita sancti Disibodi composed by Hildegard of Bingen around 1170, several centuries after his death. By tradition he was born in Ireland, in some accounts the son of a lesser chieftain, and entered holy orders, being ordained in his thirtieth year. The dates given for his life vary; he is most often placed in the seventh century, with c. 619–700 among the spans assigned to him.

According to the tradition transmitted by Hildegard, the people elected Disibod bishop after the death of their own bishop, but opposition to his discipline led to his being driven from his see. Having heard of the Benedictine form of monastic life, he set out as a pilgrim and missionary to the Frankish territories, accompanied by companions, and after a period of wandering established his hermitage at the wooded site where the Glan meets the Nahe. Though he lived as an anchorite in a small oratory on the eastern slope, a community gathered around him, building cells in the Irish manner, and grew to a sizable monastery. After leading them for some decades he died there in old age and was buried, by his own request, on the slope rather than at the summit.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 619 Born in Ireland Disibod is born in Ireland, by tradition the son of a lesser chieftain, according to the dates most commonly assigned to him.
  2. c. 640 Journey to the Frankish lands By tradition he travels with companions to the Frankish Empire as a pilgrim and missionary after leaving his Irish see.
  3. 7th century Founds the hermitage at the Nahe and Glan He settles at the confluence of the Nahe and Glan rivers, where a community gathers and grows into the monastery later called Disibodenberg.
  4. c. 700 Repose He dies in old age and is buried on the eastern slope of the hill at his own request.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Sources and the Vita of Hildegard

Disibod is among the early medieval figures whose memory is preserved almost entirely through later hagiography rather than contemporary documents. His name first appears in the martyrology compiled by Hrabanus Maurus in the ninth century. The principal narrative source is the Vita sancti Disibodi written by Hildegard of Bingen around 1170, when Hildegard was associated with the monastery built on the site of his foundation. Because this account was composed centuries after the events it relates, modern accounts transmit its details as tradition rather than as firmly fixed history, and Hildegard herself supplied no precise dates.

The variation in the dates assigned to Disibod reflects this distance between the saint and his recorded life. He is commonly placed in the seventh century, with spans such as 619 to roughly 674 or 700 appearing in different accounts. His own database entry lists him as belonging to the eighth century, while the broader tradition more often situates his career in the seventh.

Mission and the Foundation of Disibodenberg

The tradition relates that, after his departure from Ireland, Disibod travelled with companions through the Frankish lands, by some accounts active in the regions of the Vosges and the Ardennes, before settling at the confluence of the Nahe and Glan rivers. The site, a wooded height difficult of access with streams on either side, became the place he chose to remain. There he lived as a hermit in a small oratory on the eastern slope.

Though Disibod sought solitude, a community formed around him, its members building modest cells in the Irish fashion on the slopes of the hill. By the tradition recorded in Hildegard's Vita, this community grew to more than fifty monks. The monastery established on the hill came in time to be known as Disibodenberg after its founder, and centuries later it was the place where Hildegard of Bingen lived for many years before founding her own community at Rupertsberg.

Death and Commemoration

Hildegard's Vita relates that Disibod, having governed his community for several decades, died in extreme old age, in the eighty-first year of his life, and was buried at his own wish on the eastern slope where his oratory stood rather than among the buildings at the summit. He is commemorated in the Eastern Orthodox reckoning on September 8 as the founder of Disibodenberg Abbey in the Rhineland. Some accounts hold that September 8 marks his repose, while July 8 is associated with a later translation of his relics, traditionally dated to the year 754.

Sources: Latin Saints of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Rome