Aribert (archbishop of Milan)

Aribert (also: Heribert ) ( † January 16, 1045 ) was Archbishop of Milan.

He came from a distinguished Lombard knights and was a clergyman in Milan when he was elected Archbishop. He was a devotee of the German emperors, both Henry II and Conrad II, which he himself invited to rush to Italy, as a part of the Great wanted the Kingdom of Italy turn to a French prince and crowned him in Milan in 1026 as King.

Konrad rewarded him with the award for considerable rights and equality of Milan and Ravenna in ecclesiastical rank. Not content with Aribert aspired to greater temporal and spiritual powers, and would not only having regard to its pugnacious great vassals ( Capitani ) and him the adhering urban populations, acquire the pin an independent secular area equal to the Papal States, but it also in northern Italy, one of the similar papal ecclesiastical supremacy gain. His lust for power caused an uprising in 1035 the small Lehnsritter ( vavasours ), which was indeed suppressed in Milan itself, but soon joined the Lodi and the unfree citizens in other cities.

The vavasours defeated the Captains in battle and required by Conrad II recognition of their rights. This held to decide the dispute in 1037 a Reichstag in Pavia, on the Aribert, braving on his contributions to the rule of the Germans referring to so bossy and headstrong behaved that Konrad had him arrested. But Aribert escaped to Milan, where he zujauchzte the people loved it and him, although he had been ostracized and deposed by the emperor, supported the armed resistance against it eagerly. In the victorious defense against the Germans, the free citizenship of Milan, Aribert strengthened as a badge of the Carrocio ( flags car ) awarded. But now arose a fierce war between her and the vavasours during which Aribert of Milan fled and died on 16 January 1045.

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  • Archbishop of Milan
  • Roman Catholic Bishop ( 11th Century )
  • Born in the 10th or 11th century
  • Died in 1045
  • Man
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