Bruno (archbishop of Trier) explained

Type:Archbishop
Bruno
Archbishop of Trier
Church:Catholic Church
Diocese:Electorate of Trier
Term:1101–1124
Birth Date:c. 1045
Death Date:25 April 1124

Bruno (died 1124) was the archbishop of Trier from 1101 until his death. He was a relative of the Emperor Henry IV and a priest of Trier Cathedral prior to his election. He was invested with his office by the emperor amidst controversy.

With Duke Frederick I of Swabia and Archbishop Frederick I of Cologne, Bruno was part of a delegation sent by Henry IV to his rebellious son Henry V in early 1105. The job of the delegates was "somehow to reconcile" father and son, but they failed since the younger Henry refused to have anything to do with his excommunicated father.

In 1107 Bruno founded Springiersbach Abbey out of a bequest left to the church by a ministerialis named Benigna, who had belonged to the Count Palatine Siegfried of Orlamünde.

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