Saint of the Day – 27 September – Saint Hiltrude of Liessies (c740-c790) Virgin, Recluse, Nun, Founder of a female Convent. She died in c790 of natural causes in Avesnois, in the vicinity of Liessies, in the Diocese of Cambrai. Also known as – Iltrude. Additional Memorial – 26 September in the Diocese of Cambrai.
Hiltrude was the daughter of Ada, a Frankish noblewoman and Wibert, Count of Poitiers, who owned lands between the Sambre and Meuse rivers in modern France. Hiltrude;s father, Wibert, founded a Monastery at Liessies of which Hilrude’s brother, Guntrad, was the first Abbot.
Hiltrude herself wished to retire there and live the life of a Nun, however, her parents wanted her to marry a Burgundian lord. But she managed to fulfil her desires with the assistance of her brother and took the veil, with the blessing of the Bishop of Cambrai. The noble suitor married her sister instead.
Her brother welcomed her, and provided her with a cell attached to the Abbey Chapel. There, she lived as a Nun, participating in the liturgical life of the Abbey. Today there is a little Chapel dedicated to St Hiltrude on this site and on her Feast Day each year, the Proper of St Hiltrude is celebrated there.
Later, following her example, several daughters of lords decided to join her and in 752 a female addition was added to the Monastery at Liessies. Hiltrude died on 27 September around 790.
Hiltrude’s fame for sanctity grew over the centuries and on 17 September 1004 the Bishop of Cambrai, Erluino, exhumed the remains of the virgin and offered them for the veneration of the faithful. Louis de Blois OSB [the renowned ‘Blosius’ (1506-1566)], the then Abbot of Liessies contributed to the development of the cult. In 1587 her skull was placed in a new silver Reliquary. During the “Thirty Years’ War” the Relics were saved in Mons, where in 1641, they were placed on their own Altar in the Church dedicated to her in Avesnois, in the vicinity of Liessies.





