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Monulph


Monulph was a sixth-century bishop of Tongeren and Maastricht, and is revered as a Roman Catholic saint.

Little is known about his life. The Acta Sanctorum only lists two vitae of Monulph, none of them older than the 11th century. His birthplace has been given as Dinant, his father's name as Randace, count of Dinant. His date of death is traditionally given as 588. Late Medieval bishops lists mention him as the 21st bishop of the Tongeren-Maastricht-Liège bishopric.

According to some historians, it was Monulph who moved the see of the old diocese of Tongeren to Maastricht. In practice the bishops of Tongeren had resided there from the beginning of the sixth century. Although it is not known for sure which Maastricht church served as Monulph's cathedral, it is assumed that this must have been the church of Our Lady, which was situated within the Roman castrum. However, no excavations have been carried out inside that church. Louis Duchesne has suggested that Monulph succeeded Saint Servatius directly (in contradiction with the account of the sixth-century bishop and historian Gregory of Tours).

According to Gregory of Tours in his Liber de Gloria Confessorum, Monulph built a large stone church ("templum magnum") on the grave of Saint Servatius, just outside the castrum of Maastricht. This church, originally dedicated to Saint Salvator, has been excavated in the 1980s. It later became the Basilica of Saint Servatius. In 1039, the remains of Monulph (and Gondulph) were elevated in a ceremony attended by Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor. Humbert, the then provost of the chapter of Saint Servatius, placed a cenotaph in the axis of the newly built 11th-century church. This cenotaph, which was removed in 1628 and rediscovered in 1890, can now be seen in the eastern crypt of the church.


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