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St. Ansgar
Feastday: February 3
Patron of Scandinavia
Ansgar was born of a noble family near Amiens. He
became a monk at Old Corbie monastery in Picardy and later at New
Corbie in Westphalia. He accompanied King Harold to Denmark when
the exiled King returned to his native land and engaged in missionary
work there. Ansgar's success caused King Bjorn of Sweden to invite
him to that country, and he built the first Christian Church in
Sweden. He became Abbot of New Corbie and first Archbishop of Hamburg
about 831, and Pope Gregory IV appointed him Legate to the Scandinavian
countries. He labored at his missionary works for the next fourteen
years but saw all he had accomplished destroyed when invading pagan
Northmen in 845 destroyed Hamburg and overran the Scandinavian countries,
which lapsed into paganism. He was appointed first Archbishop of
Bremen about 848, and the See was united with that of Hamburg by
Pope Nicholas I. Ansgar again returned to Denmark and Sweden in
854 and resumed his missionary activities, converting Erik, King
of Jutland. Ansgar's success was due to his great preaching ability,
the austerity and holiness of his life, and the miracles he is reputed
to have performed. Though called "the Apostle of the North" and
the first Christian missionary in Scandinavia, the whole area lapsed
into paganism again after his death at Bremen on February 3rd. His
name is also spelled Anskar. His feast day is February 3.
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