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==Life== Ansgar was the son of a noble [[Franks|Frankish]] family, born near [[Amiens]] (present day France).<ref name=SHMI /><ref name=dictionary>{{cite book|last=Farmer|first=David Hugh|title=The Oxford dictionary of saints|year=1997|publisher=Oxford Univ. Press|location=Oxford [u.a.]|isbn=0-19-280058-2|page=25|edition=4}}</ref> After his mother's early death, Ansgar was brought up in [[Order of Saint Benedict|Benedictine monastery]] of [[Corbie Abbey|Corbie]] in [[Picardy]].<ref name=SHMI /> According to the ''[[Vita Ansgari]]i'' ("Life of Ansgar"), when the little boy learned in a vision that his mother was in the company of [[Mary, mother of Jesus]], his careless attitude toward spiritual matters changed to seriousness.<ref>Rimbert, "Life of Ansgar" at p. 1, English translation available at https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/basis/anskar.asp</ref> His pupil, successor, and eventual biographer [[Rimbert]] considered the visions (of which this was the first) to have been Ansgar's main life motivator. Ansgar acted in the context of the phase of [[Christianization]] of [[Duchy of Saxony|Saxony]] (present day [[Northern Germany]]) begun by [[Charlemagne]] and continued by Charlemagne's son and successor, [[Louis the Pious]]. In 822 Ansgar became one of many missionaries sent to found the abbey of [[Corvey]] (New Corbie) in [[Westphalia]], where he became a teacher and preacher. A group of monks including Ansgar were sent further north to [[Jutland]] with the king [[Harald Klak]], who had received baptism during his exile. With Harald's downfall in 827 and Ansgar's companion Autbert having died, their school for the sons of courtiers closed and Ansgar returned to Germany. Then in 829, after the Swedish king [[Björn at Hauge]] requested missionaries for his [[Swedes]], King Louis sent Ansgar, now accompanied by friar Witmar from New Corbie as his assistant. Ansgar preached and made converts, particularly during six months at [[Birka]], on Lake [[Mälaren]], where the wealthy widow [[Mor Frideborg]] extended hospitality. Ansgar organized a small congregation with her and the king's steward, Hergeir, as its most prominent members. In 831 Ansgar returned to Louis' court at [[Worms, Germany|Worms]] and was appointed to the [[Prince-Archbishopric of Bremen|Archbishopric of Hamburg-Bremen]]. This was a new archbishopric, incorporating the bishoprics of Bremen and [[Verden, Germany|Verden]] and with the right to send missions into all the northern lands, as well as to consecrate bishops for them. Ansgar received the mission of evangelizing pagan [[Denmark]], [[Norway]] and [[Sweden]]. The King of Sweden decided to cast lots as to whether to admit the Christian missionaries into his kingdom. Ansgar recommended the issue to the care of God, and the lot was favorable.<ref name=SHMI /> Ansgar was consecrated as a bishop in November 831, with the approval of [[Pope Gregory IV|Gregory IV]]. Before traveling north once again, Ansgar traveled to Rome to receive the [[pallium]] directly from the pope's hands, and was formally named legate for the northern lands. [[Ebbo, Archbishop of Reims]] had previously received a similar commission, but would be deposed twice before his death in 851, and never actually traveled so far north, so the jurisdiction was divided by agreement, with Ebbo retaining Sweden for himself. For a time Ansgar devoted himself to the needs of his own diocese, which was still a missionary territory and had few churches. He founded a monastery and a school in Hamburg. Although intended to serve the Danish mission further north, it accomplished little. After [[Louis the Pious]] died in 840, his empire was divided and Ansgar lost the abbey of [[Torhout|Turholt]], which Louis had given to endow Ansgar's work. Then in 845, the [[Danes]] unexpectedly raided Hamburg, destroying all the church's treasures and books. Ansgar now had neither see nor revenue, and many helpers deserted him. The new king, Louis' third son, [[Louis the German]], did not re-endow Turholt to Ansgar, but in 847 he named the missionary to the vacant diocese of Bremen, where Ansgar moved in 848. However, since Bremen had been [[suffragan]] to the Bishop of Cologne, combining the sees of Bremen and Hamburg presented canonical difficulties. After prolonged negotiations, [[Pope Nicholas I]] would approve the union of the two dioceses in 864. Through this political turmoil, Ansgar continued his northern mission. The Danish civil war compelled him to establish good relations with two kings, [[Horik I|Horik the Elder]] and his son, [[Horik II]]. Both assisted him until his death; Ansgar was able to secure permission to build a church in [[Hedeby|Sleswick]] north of Hamburg and recognition of Christianity as a tolerated religion.<ref>Wood, Ian. The Missionary Life: Saints and the Evangelisation of Europe, 400–1050. Great Britain: Longman, 2001. pp. 124–125</ref> Ansgar did not forget the Swedish mission, and spent two years there in person (848–850), averting a threatened pagan reaction. In 854, Ansgar returned to Sweden when king [[Olof (I) of Sweden|Olof]] ruled in Birka. According to Rimbert, he was well disposed to Christianity. On a Viking raid to [[Apuole]] (current village in [[Lithuania]]) in [[Courland]], the Swedes plundered the [[Curonians]].
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