Venerable (Monastic) 8th century

Venerable Lioba

c. 710 - 782

Also known as Leoba · Liobgytha

An English nun who assisted St Boniface in Germany and led several monastic communities.

Feast Day
September 28
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Mother Lioba, Abbess of Tauberbischofsheim

Life

Lioba (also rendered Leoba or Leofgyth) was an Anglo-Saxon nun of the eighth century who left Wessex to support the German mission of Saint Boniface and became abbess of the convent at Tauberbischofsheim in Franconia. Her name derives from Old English elements meaning 'beloved.'

Trained in the English double-monastery tradition, she became one of the most influential women in the Frankish church of her day, overseeing the nuns associated with Boniface's mission and serving as a counselor to bishops and to the Carolingian court.

She reposed in 782 and was buried near Boniface at Fulda. Her life was recorded about fifty years after her death by the monk Rudolf of Fulda, and she is commemorated as a venerable monastic. The anchor record assigns her feast to September 28; some Orthodox parish sources observe September 22.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 710 Birth in Wessex Born in Wessex, England, to noble parents recorded as Dynne and Aebbe, an only child of elderly parents. Her mother was related to Boniface and her father was his friend.
  2. Youth Monastic formation in England Trained at Minster-in-Thanet and entered Wimborne (Winborne) Minster as an oblate under Abbess Tetta, acquiring learning in Scripture, the Fathers, classical studies, manuscript copying, and embroidery.
  3. 748 Journey to Germany At Boniface's request, traveled to Germany with companions including Thecla of Kitzingen to support his missionary work among the Saxons. Sources relate that she led a company of nuns from Wimborne for this purpose.
  4. From c. 748 Abbess of Tauberbischofsheim Established by Boniface as abbess of the convent at Tauberbischofsheim (Bischofsheim on the River Tauber) in Franconia, run on the Benedictine pattern of manual work, study, and prayer. She is also associated with the founding of nunneries at Kitzingen and Ochsenfurt.
  5. 754 Entrusted as Boniface's delegate As Boniface prepared for his final Frisian mission, he gave Lioba his monastic cowl and designated her his delegate. Bishops at Fulda consulted her on matters of monastic rule, and tradition holds she was the only woman permitted to enter the monasteries at Fulda for such consultations.
  6. Later years Retirement near Mainz Enjoying favor at the Carolingian court under Pippin III and the friendship of Hildegard, wife of Charlemagne, she retired to an estate at Schornsheim near Mainz.
  7. 28 September 782 Repose and burial at Fulda Died at Schornsheim and was buried at Fulda. Boniface had wished her placed in his own tomb; she was instead laid in a tomb near his.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Mission and Monastic Leadership

Lioba belonged to the network of English monastics who carried the Anglo-Saxon missionary impulse to the Continent in the eighth century. Boniface, consecrated a missionary bishop in 722, drew on monastic recruits from England, and Lioba was among the women he specifically requested, believing many would benefit from her example.

As abbess of Tauberbischofsheim she did not govern her community alone: according to the Vita by Rudolf of Fulda, she exercised oversight of the nuns associated with Boniface's mission more broadly. Her convent grew with local vocations and gave rise to daughter houses, and she provided education to girls and counsel to clergy and community leaders.

Her standing extended beyond the cloister to the Frankish episcopate and court. She was consulted by bishops on the monastic rule and was received at the court of Pippin III, while her friendship with Hildegard, wife of Charlemagne, linked her to the highest level of Carolingian society.

Sources and the Vita

The principal account of her life is the Vita composed by the monk Rudolf of Fulda roughly fifty years after her death. A body of correspondence connected with Boniface's circle is also associated with her, and parish sources speak of letters that attest to her piety.

Because the Vita was written at some remove from the events it describes, its details carry the character of monastic biography of the period rather than contemporary record.

Relics and Shrines

After her burial at Fulda her relics were translated more than once. They are reported to rest behind an altar in a church dedicated to Mary and the virgins of Christ at Petersberg, near Fulda.

Traditional Accounts

Miracles attributed to her intercession in the tradition surrounding her Vita include the deliverance of villages from fire and of towns from storms, the protection of nuns' reputations, and the healing of the gravely ill.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Further Reading

Primary source
  • Rudolf of Fulda, Vita Leobae (Life of Saint Leoba)
Reference
  • Leoba, English Wikipedia
  • St. Lioba, Abbess - St. Gregory the Great Orthodox Church
Notes

Born c. 710, Wessex; reposed 782, Schornsheim.

Sources: OrthodoxWiki; OCA Synaxarion (oca.org)