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Hugh of Cluny

Another "Hugh the Great" (died 956 AD) was a founder of the power of the House of Capet that ruled France.

The Abbot of Cluny sometimes referred to as "Hugh the Great" who was canonized by the Roman Catholic Church as Saint Hugh (the Great) (1024 - 1109) was one of the most influential leaders of one of the most influential monastic orders of the Middle Ages. Funded by Ferdinand I of Leon, Abbot Hugh built the third abbey church at Cluny, the largest structure in Europe for many centuries. Hugh was the driving force behing the Cluniac monastic movement during the last quarter of the eleventh century, which had priories throughout southern France and northern Spain. Hugh relationship to Ferdinand I and Alphonso VI of Leon and Castile, as well as his influence upon Pope Urban II, who had been prior at Cluny under Hugh, made Hugh one of the most powerful and influential figures of the late 11th century.

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Last updated: 10-12-2005 19:39:10
Last updated: 01-04-2007 01:18:57
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