Radegundis, St
Radegundis, St., born in 519, queen of
Clotaire I. and founder of the nunnery of
Sainte-Croix, at Poictiers. Her father was a
Thuringian prince named Bertharius. Her
austerities were so incessant that it was commonly
said the king had wedded a nun
(Venant. Fort. Acta S. Rad. c. i.). Abhorring
the married state from the first, she seems to
have finally decided to escape from it upon her
husband's treacherous murder of her brother.
Withdrawing to Noyon on the pretext of some
religious observance, her urgency overcame
the hesitation of bp. Medardus to make her a
deaconess. She then escaped from her husband's
territory to the sanctuary of St. Martin
of Tours, and thence to St. Hilary's at Poictiers.
Here she founded her monastery within a mile
or two of the city; finally, with the consent
of Clotaire, clerks were sent to the East for
wood of the true cross to sanctify it, and the
rule of SS. Caesarius and Caesaria of Arles was
adopted. Here the rest of her life was spent,
first as abbess, then as simple nun under the
rule of another. We have full information
about the beginnings of this institution from
the two Lives of Radegund, one by Venantius
Fortunatus, her intimate friend (Patr. Lat.
lxxii. 651), the other by one of her nuns called
Baudonivia (ib. 663); and also from the fact
that in Gregory's time, after Radegund's
death, the attention of all France was drawn
to the spot by the scandalous outbreak of a
body of the nuns, headed by Chrodieldis, a
natural daughter of king Charibert I. After
a residence of about 37 years she died Aug. 13,
587, and was buried by Gregory of Tours (de
Glor. Conf. c. cvi.).
[S.A.B.]