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St. Gertrude of Nivelles
Virgin, and Abbess of the Benedictine monastery of Nivelles; born in 626; died 17 March, 659.
She was a daughter of Pepin I of Landen, and a younger sister of St. Begga,
Abbess of Andenne. One day, when she was about ten years of old, her father
invited King Dagobert and some noblemen to a banquet. When on this occasion she
was asked to marry the son of the Duke of Austrasia she indignantly replied that
she would marry neither him nor any other man, but that Christ alone would be
her bridegroom. After the death of her father in 639, her mother Itta, following
the advice of St. Amandus, Bishop of Maestricht, erected a double monastery, one
for men, the other for women, at Nivelles. She appointed her daughter Gertrude
as its first abbess, while she herself lived there as a nun, assisting the young
abbess by her advice. Among the numerous pilgrims that visited the monastery of
Nivelles, there were the two brothers St. Follian and St. Ultan, both of whom
were Irish monks and were on their way from Rome to Peronne, where their brother
St. Furseus, lay buried. Gertrude and her mother gave them a tract of land
called Fosse on which they built a monastery. Ultan was made superior of the new
house, while Follian remained at Nivelles, instructing the monks and nuns in
Holy Scripture. After the death of Itta in 652, Gertrude entrusted the interior
management of her monastery to a few pious nuns, and appointed some capable
monks to attend to the outer affairs, in order that she might gain more time for
the study of Holy Scripture, which she almost knew by heart. The large property
left by her mother she used for building churches, monasteries and hospices. At
the age of thirty-two she became so weak through her continuous abstinence from
food and sleep that she found it necessary to resign her office. After taking
the advice of her monks and nuns, she appointed her niece, Wulfetrude, as her
successor, in December, 658. A day before her death she sent one of the monks to
St. Ultan at Fosse to ask whether God had made known to him the hour of her
death. The saint answered that she would die the following day during holy Mass.
The prophecy was verified. She was venerated as a saint immediately after her
death, and a church was erected in her honour by Agnes, the third Abbess of
Nivelles. The towns of Geertruidenberg, Breda, and Bergen-op-Zoom in North
Brabant honour her as patron. She is also patron of travellers, and is invoked
against fever, rats, and mice, paticularly field-mice. There is a legend that
one day she sent some of her subjects to a distant country, promising that no
misfortune would befall them on the journey. When they were on the ocean, a
large sea-monster threatened to capsize their ship, but disappeared upon the
invocation of St. Gertrude. In memory of this occurence travellers during the
Middle ages drank the so-called Sinte Geerts Minne
or Gertrudenminte
before
setting out on their journey. St. Gertrude is generally represented as an abbess,
with rats and mice at her feet or running up her cloak or pastoral staff.
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