Noting from Constance

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Noting von Konstanz (first mentioned in 921; † August 12, 934 in Konstanz ) was Bishop of Konstanz from 919/920 to 934 .

He is said to have been a monk in St. Gallen and a teacher there to his later successor Konrad . In 919/920 he was appointed Bishop of Constance. He conjured up the friendship treaty concluded in 921 between Heinrich I and Charles the Simple .

Noting was present at the Reichstag in Worms in 926 and at the Synod in Erfurt in June 932.

In 926 he defended Constance against the Hungarians .

In 930 he announced that the relics of St. Mark , which had previously been issued as those of St. Valens, were in the Reichenau monastery and decreed that from now on the entire diocese should celebrate the St. Mark's festival on April 25th.

Bishop Noting died on August 12, 934 in Konstanz and was buried in the Konstanz Minster in the presence of Bishop Ulrich von Augsburg .

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Individual evidence

  1. a b Helmut Maurer : The Bishops of Constance from the end of the 6th century to 1206 ( Germania sacra ; NF 42.1; The dioceses of the ecclesiastical province of Mainz. The Diocese of Constance ; 5). Walter de Gruyter , Berlin / New York 2003, ISBN 3-11-017664-5 , p. 123. ( digitized version )
  2. Helmut Maurer: The Bishops of Constance from the end of the 6th century to 1206 ( Germania sacra ; NF 42.1; The dioceses of the ecclesiastical province of Mainz. The Diocese of Constance ; 5). Walter de Gruyter, Berlin / New York 2003, ISBN 3-11-017664-5 , p. 122.
predecessor Office successor
Solomon III Bishop of Constance
919 / 920–934
Konrad I of Altdorf