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Robert of Arbrissel
Itinerant preacher, founder of Fontevrault, b. c. 1047 at Arbrissel (now
Arbressec) near Rhétiers, Brittany; d. at Orsan, probably 1117. Robert studied
in Paris during the pontificate of Gregory VII, perhaps under Anselm of Laon and
later displayed considerable theological knowledge. The date and place of his
ordination are unknown. In 1089 he was recalled to his native Diocese of Rennes
by Bishop Sylvester de la Guerche, who desired to reform his flock. As
archpriest, Robert devoted himself to the suppression of simony, lay investiture,
clerical concubinage, irregular marriages, and to the healing of feuds. This
reforming zeal aroused such enmity that upon Sylvester's death in 1093, Robert
was compelled to leave the diocese. He went to Angers and there commenced
ascetic practices which he continued throughout his life. In 1095 he became a
hermit in the forest of Craon (s.w. of Laval), living a life of severest penance
in the company of Bernard, afterwards founder of the Congregation of Tiron,
Vitalis, founder of Savigny, and others of considerable note. His piety,
eloquence, and strong personality attracted many followers, for whom in 1096 he
founded the monastery of Canons Regular of La Roé, becoming himself the first
abbot. In the same year Urban II summoned him to Angers and appointed him a
preacher (seminiverbus, cf. Acts 17, 18) second only to himself with orders to
travel everywhere in the performance of this duty
(Vita Baldrici).
There is no evidence that Robert assisted Urban to preach the Crusade, for
his theme was the abandonment of the world and especially poverty. Living in the
utmost destitution, he addressed himself to the poor and would have his
followers known only as the poor of Christ
, while the ideal he put forward was
In nakedness to follow Christ naked upon the Cross
. His eloquence, heightened
by his strikingly ascetic appearance, drew crowds everywhere. Those who desired
to embrace the monastic state under his leadership he sent to La Roé, but the
Canons objected to the number and diversity of the postulants, and between 1097
and 1100 Robert formally resigned his abbacy, and founded Fontevrault. His
disciples were of every age and condition, including even lepers and converted
prostitutes. Robert continued his missionary journeys over the whole of Western
France till the end of his life, but little is known of this period. At the
Council of Poitiers, Nov., 1100, he supported the papal legates in
excommunicating Philip of France on account of his lawless union with Bertrade
de Montfort; in 1110 he attended the Council of Nantes. Knowledge of his
approaching death caused him to take steps to ensure the permanence of his
foundation at Fontevrault. He imposed a vow of stability on his monks and
summoned a Chapter (September, 1116) to settle the form of government. From
Hautebruyère a priory founded by the penitent Bertrade, he went to Orsan,
another priory of Fontevrault, where he died. The Vita Andreæ
gives a detailed
account of his last year of life.
Robert was never canonized. The accusation made against him by Geoffrey of
Vendôme of extreme indiscretion in his choice of exceptional ascetic practices
(see P.L., CLVII, 182) was the source of much controversy during the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries. Other evidence of eccentric actions on Robert's part
and scandals among his mixed followers may have helped to give rise to these
rumors. The Fontevrists did everything in their power to discredit the attacks
on their founder. The accusatory letters of Marbodius of Rennes and Geoffrey of
Vendôme were without sufficient cause declared to be forgeries and the
manuscript Letter of Peter of Saumur was made away with, probably at the
instigation of Jeanne Baptiste de Bourbon, Abbess of Fontevrault. This natural
daughter of Henry IV applied to Innocent X for the beatification of Robert, her
request being supported by Louis XIV and Henrietta of England. Both this attempt
and one made about the middle of the nineteenth century failed, but Robert is
usually given the title of Blessed
. The original recension of the Rule of
Fontevrault no longer exists; the only surviving writing of Robert is his letter
of exhortation to Ermengarde of Brittany (ed. Petigny in Bib. de l'école des
Chartes
, 1854, V, iii).
Acta SS., Feb., III, 593 sqq., contains two ancient lives by BALDRIC of Dol and the monk ANDREW; PETIGNY, Robert d'Arbissel et Geoffroi de Vendôme in Bib. de l' école des Chartes; WALTER, Ersten Wanderprediger Frankreichs, I (Leipzig, 1903), a modern scientific book; IDEM, Excurs, II (1906); BOEHMER in Theologische Literaturzeitung, XXIX, col. 330, 396, a hostile review.
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