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Ulrich of Bamberg

A cleric of the cathedral church of Bamberg, of whom nothing more is known than that he lived about 1100 at Bamberg

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Ulrich of Bamberg, (UDALRICUS BABENBERGENSIS), a cleric of the cathedral church of Bamberg, of whom nothing more is known than that he lived about 1100 at Bamberg. He is probably identical with the priest of Bamberg of the same name (d. July 7, 1127), who is often mentioned in official documents and who bestowed large benefits on the monastery of Michelsberg. Ulrich’s work is called “Codex epistolaris, continens variorum pontificum et imperatorum Romanorum, ut et S.R.E. cardinalium et S.R.I. principum ecclesiasticorum seculariumque epistolas”. This collection of documents was completed in 1125 and dedicated to Bishop Gebhard of Würzburg. It contains letters from the year 900 on and was undoubtedly intended for the training of chancellors and statesmen, giving examples as models for the form of letters and public documents. Numerous important letters and charters of that period, which are preserved in it, offer rich material for the history of the relations between the emperors and popes; in particular the letters exchanged by Emperor Lothair, Henry the Proud, and Innocent I give an animated and instructive picture of conditions at that time. These letters also show how the statesmen at the episcopal courts and probably also the bishops were trained. After the collection had been closed by Ulrich several supplements were added that extend to 1134; these additional documents are generally addressed to Bishop Otto of Bamberg. The work has been well edited by Jaffe in the “Bibliotheca rerum germanicarum”, V (Berlin, 1869).

PATRICIUS SCHLAGER


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