ST AMADEUS OF LAUSANNE1
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Amadeus’ religious formation began, in fact, well before the days of his
youth. He was only a few years past the days of his babyhood when his father, Lord
Amadeus d’Hauterives of the ancient and noble house of Clermont, turned apostle
of monastic life and, sometime around 1119, brought to the newly founded
Cistercian abbey of Bonnevaux, near Vienne, not only himself but his ten-year old
boy, Amadeus junior, and seventeen knight-companions as well.
Whatever else the senior Amadeus had given up in coming to the poor,
struggling community of Bonnevaux, he had not given up the idea that his son
should receive a solid education. At Bonnevaux the lad did begin receiving an
education, but hardly of the sort deemed suitable by his concerned father. The
philosophy of education held by the saintly Abbot John was that the anointing of
the Paraclete could teach the lad more in a second than the teachings of an apostate
grammarian like Priscian in a stretch of many years. The force of the argument
was lost on Amadeus senior. In a moment of depression, he apostatized; and one
day, probably in the year 1122, he took his son and rode off with him to the great
abbey of Cluny, with its tradition of enlightened humanism.
The account of Amadeus senior’s brief, unhappy life as a monk of Cluny, his
anguished repentance, and his return to Bonnevaux, belongs to another story. But
if Bonnevaux could not provide Amadeus junior with a suitable education, neither
could Cluny; for almost immediately the lad was sent for further studies to the
court of his kinsman, Conrad of Hohenstaufen, the future Emperor Conrad. The
three years Amadeus spent in Germany could hardly have sufficed to complete the
education of the adolescent, but we nevertheless find him in 1125, shortly after
having fulfilled the minimum age-requirement for acceptance as a Cistercian
novice, knocking at the gate of Clairvaux…12
For fourteen years young Amadeus had the joy of living under the tutelage
of Saint Bernard himself; and it was in this setting of Clairvaux, with all its
contagious enthusiasm, devotio iocunda, and seriousness of purpose, that the
stripling Amadeus grew to full manhood. The attainments of the mature Amadeus
must have impressed even Saint Bernard, who, in 1139, deemed him ready to
become abbot of the Savoyard abbey of Hautecombe. This monastery had been
founded much earlier in the century, but had become affiliated with the Cistercian
Order only in 1135. Amadeus’ abbacy coincided with the change of location of the
original abbey and the construction of the monastic buildings; and it was also
under Amadeus that the consolidation of the Cistercian ideals in the recently
affiliated community took place.
The young abbot’s gifts as administrator and spiritual father were
considerable enough to draw attention to him well outside the immediate sphere
of the Cistercian family. For when the deplorable Guy de Maligny finally resigned
his episcopal dignity in 1144, it was the thirty-four-year-old Abbot Amadeus of
Hautecombe whom the clergy and faithful of Lausanne chose to succeed Bishop
Guy. Accepting the burden of the episcopal office only at the insistence of Pope
Lucius II, Bishop Amadeus remained very much Amadeus the monk. At no time
during the troubled fourteen years of his episcopacy did the faithful of Lausanne
find reason to regret their choice of pastor; and when Amadeus died on 27 August
1159, those who were with him were well aware that they were attending the
deathbed of a saint.