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is a letter written to Gisela between 793 and 796, where he thanked her warmly for the gift of a hat. In
September 798, he writes to her from his monastery at St. Loup de Troyes, where he laments that an acute fever has stopped him from travelling to see her. In this same letter, he thanks her for the gift of a cross, apparently made at her monastery, and he bade her farewell as a most beloved sister. Along with this, he dedicated the last two books of his commentary on John's gospel to her and her niece, Rotrudis.
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was a close friend. Where he wrote personal poems for each of the king's children, he also wrote one for Gisela, in which "Alcuin hailed her as a noble sister in the bond of sweet love, assuring her of her prayers of the brethren at Tours." Other correspondence which hints at a friendly relationship
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Gisela is often said to be the only sister to
Charlemagne and Carloman, but this was not the case. Pepin the Short in fact had seven legitimate children; Gisela had three older brothers, Rothaid III, born 740, Charlemagne, born 742, and Carloman, born 751. She had two older sisters, Adelheid, born
106:. Other work she was involved in was the rebuilding of the church of St. Mary at Chelles, as well as building up the library, according to a letter from Alcuin. In it, he encourages her leadership in the project and states his intention to send a pupil and friend, Fredegisus, to assist her.
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740, and
Bertbelle, born 745. She also had a single younger brother, Charles, who was born in 759. Most of her older siblings died before their father, although the years are unknown. Her little brother died in infancy, aged 2. She was one of three surviving children.
33:(757, Aachen, Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany – 810–11, Chelles, Seine-et-Marne, Île-de-France, France) was a Frankish princess and abbess. There are also two variations of her name, which are Gisele and Giselle. She was the daughter of
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The specific year of her death is unknown, but she died between 810 and 811 AD in
Chelles, Seine-et-Marne, Île-de-France, France, in the convent she had served for most of her life, aged between 53 and 54.
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active in the 8th and 9th centuries. While little is known about her education, there is suggestion she was well learned, for her correspondence with Alcuin was written and received in
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69:, but the contract was broken. There is also a brief mention of Gisela being betrothed to Adalgis, son of the Lombard king
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Considering the active scriptoria in Gisela's abbey, it can be argued that she held an involved role in the
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in 770. It is likely that by this point she had been allowed to choose a life of religion for herself.
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169:, ed. Renate Bridenthal, Claudia Koonz and Susan Stuard, (Houghton Mifflin Company, 1987), 139.
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states that Gisela had been dedicated to religion since her childhood. She became a nun at
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330:"Death of Gisele, Abbess of Chelles at Chelles, Seine-et-Marne, Ile-de-France, France"
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lived from about 781 to after at least 808, but little else is known of her life.
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Sanctity and Power: The Dual
Pursuit of Early Medieval Women
65:(future Emperor Leo IV), son of Byzantine Emperor
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117:also named a daughter Gisela after the abbess.
180:"King Pippin III *the Short* of the Franks"
167:Becoming Visible: Women in European History
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301:. James Clarke & Co. p. 91.
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244:. James Clarke & Co. p. 91.
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139:"Birth of Gisele, Abbess of Chelles"
295:Dales, Douglas (29 November 2012).
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61:Early in life she was betrothed to
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298:Alcuin: His Life and Legacy
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381:8th-century Christian nuns
376:8th-century Frankish nuns
113:Charlemagne and his wife
76:Charlemagne's biographer
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386:9th-century French nuns
104:Carolingian Renaissance
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165:, Suzanne F. Wemple,
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43:Charlemagne
366:810 deaths
361:757 births
355:Categories
339:17 October
314:17 October
257:17 October
223:17 October
189:9 November
148:17 October
125:References
86:scriptoria
71:Desiderius
115:Hildegard
184:Geneanet
47:Carloman
285:, p. 91
78:Einhard
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96:Alcuin
31:Gisela
90:Latin
341:2019
334:Geni
316:2019
303:ISBN
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53:Life
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63:Leo
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