Oda of Meissen, also named Ode, Old High German form for Uta or Ute (Polish: Oda Miśnieńska, German: Oda von Meißen; born c. 996 – died 31 October or 13 November after 1025), was a Saxon countess and member of the Ekkehardiner dynasty. She married Piast DukeBolesław I the Brave (who later became in the first King of Poland) as his fourth and last wife.
The Ekkehardiner dynasty were under Otto III, Holy Roman Emperor, amongst the most influential princes of the Holy Roman Empire. After Otto III's death, they tried to maintain their position as ruling Margraves of Meissen with his successor Henry II. To do this, they sought a close relationship with the neighboring Polish ruler Bolesław I the Brave, the most powerful friend and ally of the Holy Roman Empire. After the outbreak of the conflict between Henry II and Bolesław I from 1002, they only took part in the campaigns against the Polish ruler. When the Peace of Bautzen ended the conflict in 1018, Oda's marriage to Bolesław I served to consolidate the agreement.
The Ekkehardiner family already maintained close ties with the Piast dynasty before Oda's marriage. Eckard I's brother Gunzelin was some way closely related to Bolesław I (either uterine half-brother or brother-in-law). Eckard I's son Herman I married with Bolesław I's daughter Regelinda in 1002; after Oda married Bolesław I in 1018 she became the stepmother-in-law of her own brother.[3]
Marriage with Bolesław I
Since the death of his third wife Emnilda in 1017, Bolesław I began to look a suitable new consort, and he turned his attention to the Holy Roman Empire. On 30 January 1018 the Peace of Bautzen was signed between Emperor Henry II and the Polish ruler; during the preliminary negotiations of this treaty in Ortenburg Castle, was decided that the widower Bolesław I would reinforced his dynastic bonds with the German nobility through a marriage. The chosen bride was the much younger Oda,[4] whose eldest brother Margrave Herman I of Meissen gave his consent as the head of the Ekkehardiner family.[5] Accompanied by her brother and Bolesław I's son Otto, Oda traveled to Cziczani (also spelled Sciciani, at the site of either modern Groß-Seitschen[6] or Zinnitz[7] or Zützen[8]) Castle, the residence of the Piasts in Lower Lusatia. There, she was received with a sea of lights when she arrived at night by Bolesław I and a large crowd. The marriage is believed to be celebrated in simple secular rite followed (at best with a subordinate ecclesiastical contribution, especially since the church only began to be interested in the institute of marriage at this point in time)[9] four days later after the formal signing of the peace treaty, on 3 February 1018 or a few days later.[1]
In his chronicle, written between 1012 and 1018, Thietmar of Merseburg provides the only contemporary report of the wedding celebrations.[10] According to his comments, he criticizes the marriage and paints a gloomy picture of Oda's future: he says that "from now she has lived outside the law of matrimony and thus in a manner unworthy for a noble lady like her",[11] because the wedding was celebrated into against the rules of the Church and without its consent during Lent. The following remarks by Thietmar seem to confirm his prediction. In connection with the victory over Yaroslav the Wise, Grand Prince of Kiev, he describes Bolesław I as an "old bastard" (antiquus fornicator), who made Yaroslav's captive sister, Predslava, his concubine, regardless of his wife and against any law.[12] It is doubtful whether conclusions can be drawn about the marriage with Oda from this. According to the Polish historian Andrzej Pleszczyński, Bolesław I's behavior cannot be measured against today's moral standards.[13] In doing so, he had fulfilled archaic expectations of a victorious ruler, which at that time were much more deeply rooted in his domains than Christian values.
According to older interpretations of Thietmar's Chronicle, his criticism is also directed against Oda. The phrase sine matronali consuetudine whom he wrote about her, should be translated as "without virginity".[14] Oda thus led a dissolute way of life prior to her wedding and not as it would have been worthy of such a respected marriage.[15][16] German historian Robert Holtzmann comments on Thietmar's reports, which he also understands, as a kind of "bitter irony".[17]
In addition to the significance for Oda's personal fate, the marriage of Bolesław I had a political dimension. The union was concluded as a part of the Peace of Bautzen signed between Emperor Henry II and the Polish. With this treaty, their almost two decades-long disputes about rank, honor and reputation, but also about territorial claims over the March of Lusatia, the Milceni land and the adjacent SorbianMeissen finished.[18] On Henry II's campaigns against Bolesław I, Oda's family was part of a "Polish-friendly alliance party",[19] alongside the powerful Billunger dynasty, who only hesitantly involved. The marriage renewed the traditional friendship between Piast and Ekkehardiner dynasties after the daughter of Bolesław I, Regelinda, who was married with Oda's brother Margrave Herman I of Meissen, died in 1016. In addition, Bolesław I's prestigious marriage with Oda, a high-ranked noble German lady, restored his honor and was an expression of his victory.[20] In the Peace of Bautzen, Bolesław I was as the clear winner, as he was able to maintain his sovereignty over the March of Lusatia and the Milceni land, to which he was entitled because of his third marriage to Emnilda, a daughter of the Lusatian prince Dobromir,[21] just as claimed as the Ekkehardiner family. And finally, there are no more attacks by Bolesław I on the neighboring Margraviate of Meissen, ruled by Oda's brother Herman I.
Later life
Oda and Bolesław I's marriage only produced one known child, a daughter, Matylda (died ca. 1036) —named after her maternal aunt the Margravine of Lower Lusatia—[22] who was betrothed on 18 May 1035 with Otto of Schweinfurt, Margrave of the Nordgau; however, the marriage never took place because the betrothal contract was broken by the Council of Tribur in 1036, presumably on the grounds of consanguinity.[23] Nothing is known about Oda's further life.[1] Considerations that she returned to the ancestral seat of the Ekkehardiner dynasty in Naumburg with her daughter in the turmoil after Bolesław I's death on 17 June 1025,[24] can not be substantiated by contemporary written sources. The year of her death is also not recorded.[1] In the necrology of the Church of St. Michaelis, Lüneburg, entries for a Ode com, i.e. a Countess Oda (Ode comitessa), are recorded on 31 October and 13 November. German Historian Gerd Althoff came to the conclusion that one of the two is dedicated to Oda's memory, because Bolesław I and many members of the Ekkehardiner dynasty were also included in the necrology.[25]
Reception
In the German-speaking area, Oda of Meissen has not received much attention. Historical accounts mention her at best as a very marginal figure in connection with the Peace of Bautzen, as the wife of Bolesław I[26] or as a member of the Ekkehardiner dynasty.[27] An exception to this is a consideration by German historian Ferdinand Wachter in the first half of the 19th century, according to which among the painted statue donators of Naumburg Cathedral made in the 13th century could not represent Eckard II's wife Uta von Ballenstedt, but his sister Oda of Meissen.[24] In particular, the crown of the sandstone figure, which is only inscribed with the name "Uta", was also recently challenged by the art historian Michael Imhof, who had doubts about an identification of the founder figure as Uta of Ballenstedt, although he suspected that instead of Oda of Meissen was her sister-in-law and stepdaughter Regelinda of Poland the one portrayed there.[28] In the opinion of Kerstin Merkel, the person portrayed must have been perceived by contemporaries as a godless woman, because she wore her coat like a man.[29]
Polish historians considered Oda of Meissen to be the first Queen consort of Poland until the 19th century. The reason for this assumption was a note by the Polish historiographer Jan Długosz in his 15th century Annales seu cronicae incliti Regni Poloniae (Annals or Chronicles of the Famous Kingdom of Poland).[30] In it he reports in accordance with contemporary Saxon annals,[31] Bolesław I was crowned King on 18 April 1025 after the death of his adversary Henry II. In addition, Długosz indicates, however, that together with Bolesław I an unnamed Queen was crowned, in whom subsequent generations suspected was Oda of Meissen. In the meantime, however, the equation of the nameless crowned queen with Oda of Meissen is just as baseless as the underlying note by Jan Długosz. The scientific examination of the works of Jan Długosz has shown that he often supplemented the sources used by him with events that, in his opinion, must have taken place.[32]
^Oda's parents and siblings with sources in Ruth Bork: Die Billunger. Mit Beiträgen zur Geschichte des deutsch-wendischen Grenzraumes im 10. und 11. Jahrhundert. (in German). Greifswald 1951, pp. 114–117.
^Joachim Henning, Neue Burgen im Osten: Handlungsorte und Ereignisgeschichte der Polenzüge Heinrichs II. im archäologischen und dendrochronologischen Befund. In: Achim Hubel, Bernd Schneidmüller (ed.), Aufbruch ins zweite Jahrtausend. Innovation und Kontinuität in der Mitte des Mittelalters (= Mittelalter-Forschungen. Band 16). Thorbecke, Ostfildern 2004, p. 166. ISBN3-7995-4267-1
^Elke Mehnert, Sandra Kersten, Manfred Frank Schenke, Spiegelungen: Entwürfe zu Identität und Alterität; Festschrift für Elke Mehnert (in German), Frank & Timme GmbH, 2005, p. 481. ISBN3-86596-015-4
^This interpretation of Thietmar's report: ...quae vivebat hactenus sine matronali consuetudine admodum digna tanto fordere. was made by Werner Trillmich in: Thietmar von Merseburg: Chronik (= Ausgewählte Quellen zur deutschen Geschichte des Mittelalters. Band 9) (in German). Retransmitted and further explained by Werner Trillmich (with an addendum and a bibliography by Steffen Patzold) in: 9., bibliographisch aktualisierte Auflage. WBG – Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft (in German), Darmstadt 2011, p. 441. ISBN978-3-534-24669-4
^Siegfried Hirsch, Jahrbücher des Deutschen Reichs unter Heinrich II. vol. 3 (in German). Edited and completed by Harry Bresslau. Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1875, p. 88 note 1.
^Kurt Engelbert, Die deutschen Frauen der Piasten Mieszko I. bis Heinrich I. (in German) In: Archiv für schlesische Kirchengeschichte. vol. 12, 1954, p. 6.
^Johannes Strebitzki (ed.), Die Chronik des Thietmar von Merseburg. (in German), translated by Johann Christian Mauritz Laurent (= Die Geschichtschreiber der deutschen Vorzeit. 2nd Complete Edition, vol. 39, ZDB-ID1402490-1). 2nd Edition. Dyksche Buchhandlung, Leipzig 1892, p. 333.
^Robert Holtzmann (ed.), Thietmari Merseburgensis episcopi chronicon. = Die Chronik des Bischofs Thietmar von Merseburg und ihre Korveier Überarbeitung [= Monumenta Germaniae Historica. Scriptores. 6: Scriptores rerum Germanicarum. Nova Series vol. 9] (in German). Weidmann, Berlin 1935, p. 494.
^Knut Görich, Die deutsch-polnischen Beziehungen im 10. Jahrhundert aus der Sicht sächsischer Quellen. (in German) In: Frühmittelalterliche Studien. vol. 43, 2009, p. 320 f.
^Quote from Stefan Weinfurter, Heinrich II. (1002–1024). Herrscher am Ende der Zeiten. (in German) 3rd, improved edition. Pustet, Regensburg 2002, p. 210. ISBN3-7917-1654-9
^Eduard Mühle, Die Piasten. Polen im Mittelalter [= Beck’sche Reihe. C.H. Beck Wissen. vol. 2709] (in German). Beck, Munich 2011, p. 27. ISBN978-3-406-61137-7
^Gerd Althoff, Adels- und Königsfamilien im Spiegel ihrer Memorialüberlieferung. Studien zum Totengedenken der Billunger und Ottonen [= Münstersche Mittelalter-Schriften. vol. 47] (in German). Fink, Munich 1984, p. 420, 423. ISBN3-7705-2267-2
^Norbert Kersken, Heiratsbeziehungen der Piasten zum römisch-deutschen Reich. (in German) In: Dariusz Adamczyk, Norbert Kersken (ed.): Fernhändler, Dynasten, Kleriker. Die piastische Herrschaft in kontinentalen Beziehungsgeflechten vom 10. bis zum frühen 13. Jahrhundert. Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden 2015, p. 97. ISBN978-3-447-10421-0
^Michael Imhof, Holger Kunde, Uta von Naumburg (in German) Imhof, Petersberg 2011, p. 58. ISBN978-3-86568-655-8
^Kerstin Merkel, Neue Beobachtungen zur Kleidung der Naumburger Stifterfiguren. (in German) In: Hartmut Prohm, Holger Kunde (ed.): Der Naumburger Meister – Tagungsband zur Landesausstellung 2011. Imhoff, Petersberg 2012, p. 191 ISBN978-3-86568-742-5; see also "NEUE BEOBACHTUNGEN ZUR KLEIDUNG DER NAUMBURGER STIFTERFIGUREN"(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on August 7, 2017. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
^Zbigniew Satała, Poczet polskich królowych, księżnych i metres. [Galerie der polnischen Königinnen, Prinzessinnen und Mätressen] (original Polish, translated in German). Glob, Szczecin 1990, p. 24. ISBN83-7007-257-7
^Ryszard Grzesik, Mittelalterliche Chronistik in Ostmitteleuropa. (in German) In: Gerhard Wolf, Norbert H. Ott (ed.): Handbuch Chroniken des Mittelalters. de Gruyter, Berlin and others 2016, p. 794. ISBN978-3-11-034171-3
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