Hieromartyr 11th century

Hieromartyr Bruno of Querfurt

c. 974 – 1009

Also known as Brun · Boniface of Querfurt

A missionary bishop among the Baltic peoples, martyred during his mission in 1009.

Feast Day
October 15
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Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Bruno of Querfurt, Missionary Bishop and Apostle of the Prussians

Life

Bruno of Querfurt, also called Boniface, was a missionary bishop of the late tenth and early eleventh centuries who labored among the peoples of central and eastern Europe and was martyred on the Prussian frontier in 1009. He is venerated as a hieromartyr, commemorated on October 15, and is remembered as one of the leading missionaries of his age, sometimes called the 'Second Apostle of the Prussians.'

He was born around 974 at Querfurt in Saxony, into a noble family. As a youth he was educated at the cathedral school of Magdeburg, where he was a fellow student of the future chronicler Thietmar of Merseburg, and he was made a canon of Magdeburg Cathedral while still young. The young emperor Otto III drew him into the imperial court and made him his chaplain, taking him to Rome for the imperial coronation.

Drawn to the ascetic life, Bruno entered the monastery of Saints Boniface and Alexius on the Aventine Hill in Rome, where Adalbert of Prague had earlier been a monk, and from this connection he likely took the name Boniface. He afterward joined the hermitage of Pereum near Ravenna, an island settlement in the marshes, where he received rigorous monastic training in the circle of Saint Romuald, a center of the early Camaldolese reform.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 974 Born at Querfurt Born into a noble family at Querfurt in Saxony.
  2. c. 995–996 Court chaplain to Otto III Educated at Magdeburg and made a canon, he became chaplain to the emperor Otto III and accompanied him to Rome.
  3. February 1004 Consecrated missionary archbishop Consecrated a missionary archbishop by Archbishop Tagino of Magdeburg, having been appointed by Pope Sylvester II to lead eastern missions.
  4. c. 1007–1008 Mission to the Pechenegs Spent about five months among the Pechenegs, baptizing some thirty adults and consecrating a bishop, with the support of Grand Prince Vladimir of Kiev.
  5. 1009 Martyrdom in Prussia Martyred by beheading on the Prussian frontier with most of his eighteen companions; his body was recovered by Boleslaus the Brave of Poland.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Missionary Episcopate

Around 1003 Pope Sylvester II appointed Bruno to lead missions among the heathen peoples of eastern Europe, and in February 1004 Archbishop Tagino of Magdeburg consecrated him a missionary archbishop, bestowing the pallium. In this office he was charged not with a fixed see but with the conversion of peoples beyond the frontiers of Christendom.

He worked first in Hungary, where he sought to bring a local ruler named Ahtum (Achtum) into the Church's communion, and there completed his account of the life of Adalbert of Prague. Through the favor of Grand Prince Vladimir of Kiev he was then authorized to evangelize the Pechenegs, a Turkic people of the steppe between the Danube and the Don. By the sources he spent about five months among them, baptized roughly thirty adults, assisted in the making of peace, and consecrated a bishop to continue the work. In Poland he is also reported to have consecrated a bishop for Sweden.

Martyrdom

In late 1008 Bruno set out on his final mission among the Old Prussians, accompanied by eighteen companions, and by tradition converted a chieftain named Netimer before pressing further into the region. In 1009, on the frontier near the borders of Kievan Rus, he and his company were attacked. Bruno was put to death by beheading, while most of his companions were hanged. The traditional account names the chieftain's brother Zebeden as responsible for his death.

The accounts give the date of his martyrdom variously as February or March of 1009. Duke Boleslaus the Brave of Poland purchased the bodies of the martyrs and had them brought back into Polish lands. Bruno is commonly depicted in art with a severed hand.

Writings

Bruno was a notable author as well as a missionary. He composed a life of Adalbert of Prague and a life of the Five Martyred Brothers, Benedict and his companions, who had been killed in 1003. He is also remembered for a forthright letter addressed to King Henry II of Germany. These works are valued as sources for the ecclesiastical and political life of central and eastern Europe around the year 1000.

Notes

Born c. 974, Saxony; reposed 1009.

Sources: OrthodoxWiki; OCA Synaxarion (oca.org)