Venerable (Monastic) 8th century

Venerable Sturm of Fulda

c. 705 - 779

Also known as Sturmius

A disciple of St Boniface and the founding abbot of Fulda Abbey.

Feast Day
December 17
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Sturm, Founding Abbot of Fulda

Life

Sturm (c. 705 - 779) was an eighth-century monastic of the Frankish lands, a disciple of Saint Boniface, and the founding abbot of the monastery of Fulda, which became one of the most influential religious and cultural centers of early medieval Germany.

Born around 705 at Lorch, in a region later known as the March of Styria, he was placed in childhood under the care of Boniface and trained in Benedictine monastic life. At Boniface's direction he founded the monastery of Fulda in 744 on land granted by the Frankish Mayor of the Palace Carloman, and he governed it as its first abbot for the rest of his life.

His career bound together monastic foundation, missionary work among the Saxons, and the wider politics of the Carolingian church. He is commemorated on December 17, the day of his death in 779.

Timeline 8 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 705 Birth at Lorch Sturm was born around 705 at Lorch, in a region later associated with the March of Styria. By tradition he was related to the Agilolfing dukes of Bavaria. His parents placed him under the care of Saint Boniface, the missionary bishop active among the Germanic peoples.
  2. c. 736 Monastic settlement at Hersfeld Sturm was educated at the Benedictine monastery of Fritzlar under the abbot Wigbert. Around 736 he established a monastic settlement at Haerulfisfeld (Hersfeld) and later worked for three years as a missionary in Westphalia, afterward living as a hermit at Hersfeld until raids by the Saxons forced him to leave his unprotected site.
  3. 740 Ordination to the priesthood He was ordained priest at Fritzlar in 740.
  4. 744 Foundation of Fulda Abbey On the instruction of Boniface, Sturm set out to found a monastery in the region of Eichloha, on land granted by the Frankish Mayor of the Palace Carloman. At a ford on the Fulda River, amid the ruins of a sixth-century Merovingian site, he established the monastery and became the first abbot of Fulda.
  5. c. 748 Study at Monte Cassino Around 748 Sturm travelled with two companion monks to the abbey of Monte Cassino to study Benedictine monastic observance as practised there. He met Pope Zachary, who placed the monastery under the jurisdiction of the Holy See.
  6. 763 Exile to Jumieges After the martyrdom of Boniface in 754, conflict arose between Sturm and Lull, archbishop of Mainz. In 763 Lull persuaded the Frankish king Pippin the Younger to banish Sturm from Fulda to the abbey of Jumieges in Normandy. Sturm returned to Fulda within about two years.
  7. 774 Royal protection and Saxon mission In 774 the abbey received royal protection from Charlemagne, and Sturm was assigned missionary territories in Saxony. He established the abbey of Saint Boniface at Hamelin.
  8. 779 Death at Fulda In 779 Sturm accompanied Charlemagne into Saxony but fell ill. He died on December 17, 779, at Fulda and was buried in the abbey church.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Foundation and Government of Fulda

The monastery of Fulda was established along the Fulda River in 744 on a previously unpopulated plot, for which land rights had been obtained earlier that year. Boniface had commissioned Sturm to build a great monastery, and Sturm led the new community through a period of rapid growth as its first abbot.

Sturm shaped the abbey's observance directly: his journey to Monte Cassino around 748 brought back firsthand knowledge of Benedictine monastic life, which informed the practice at Fulda. Boniface sought autonomy for the foundation by appealing to Pope Zachary, and the monastery was placed under the jurisdiction of the Holy See, giving it standing independent of the local episcopate.

Sturm governed Fulda for roughly three and a half decades, apart from his brief exile. He was succeeded as abbot by Baugulf, under whom the abbey advanced its educational standing and grew into a major center of learning.

Missionary Work and Carolingian Church Politics

Beyond the monastery, Sturm was active as a missionary. Early in his career he preached for three years in Westphalia, and in his later years, after Fulda came under the protection of Charlemagne in 774, he was assigned missionary territories among the Saxons and founded the abbey of Saint Boniface at Hamelin.

His life intersected with the tensions of the eighth-century Frankish church. Following Boniface's death in 754, a dispute with Lull, archbishop of Mainz, led to Sturm's banishment to Jumieges in Normandy in 763 at the urging of King Pippin the Younger. He was recalled within about two years and resumed the leadership of Fulda.

Relics and Veneration

Sturm was buried in the abbey church at Fulda following his death in 779. The monastery he founded already held great significance as a pilgrimage destination because Boniface had been entombed there after his martyrdom in Frisia in 754.

He was canonized in 1139 by Pope Innocent II. His feast is kept on December 17. He is venerated as a saint in the pre-schism Western tradition and is commemorated among the Orthodox as a Western saint of the undivided Church.

Sources for His Life

The principal early account of Sturm is the Vita Sturmi, written by Eigil of Fulda (died 822), who served as the fourth abbot of the monastery. This life is the main narrative source for his foundation of Fulda, his travels, and his exile.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Further Reading

Primary source
  • Eigil of Fulda, Vita Sturmi (Life of Sturm)
Notes

Born c. 705; reposed 779, Fulda.

Sources: OrthodoxWiki; OCA Synaxarion (oca.org)