Godfrey of Amiens

Saint Godfrey of Amiens

Godfrey of Amiens
Bishop of Amiens
Born 1066
Soissons, France
Died 1115
Soissons, France
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church
Feast 8 November

Godfrey of Amiens (French: Geoffroy d'Amiens) (1066–1115) was a bishop of Amiens. He is a saint in the Catholic Church.

Life

Godfrey was born in 1066 in Moulincourt, in the diocese of Soissons. When his mother died, his father decided to take up the monastic life. The third child in a noble family, Godfrey taken at the age of five, by his uncle, the bishop of Soissons, who sent him to be educated in the Benedictine abbey of Mont-Saint-Quentin where his godfather Godefroid was abbot. While at Saint Quentin, Godfrey was given the charge of the sick, and appointed hospitaller, to receive the poor at the gate.

At the age of 25, he was ordained priest by the bishop of Noyon and became the abbot of the Abbey of Nogent-sous-Coucy. in Champagne.[1] When he arrived, the place was overrun by weeds, but he rebuilt it, establishing a hostel for pilgrims.

He declined both the abbacy of Saint-Remi and the bishopric of Reims, before being compelled to accept the office of bishop of Amiens.[1] King Philip and the Council of Troyes chose Godfrey in part because he was skilled in business affairs. Godfrey was noted for his rigid austerity with himself, those around him. He enforced clerical celibacy, and his opposition to drunkenness and simony, led to an attempt on his life.[2] Godfrey would have preferred to Grande Chartreuse to maintain a life of penitence, and in 1114 moved to a monastery. However, in 1115, he was called back to his post.

He fell sick and took refuge in the abbey of Saint Crépin in Soissons, where he died November 8, 1115.

Veneration

Notes

Sources

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