, copied between 795 and 800, and probably given by Charlemagne to Angilbert when the king visited Saint-Riquier for Easter 800 Angilbert seems to have been brought up at the court of Charlemagne at the palace school in
Aquae Granni (
Aachen). He was educated there as the pupil and then-friend of the great English scholar
Alcuin. When Charlemagne sent his young son
Pepin to Italy as King of the
Lombards, Angilbert went along as
primicerius palatii, a high administrator of the satellite court. As the friend and adviser of Pepin, he assisted for a while in the government of Italy. Angilbert delivered the document on
Iconoclasm from the Frankish Synod of Frankfurt to
Pope Adrian I, and was later sent on three important embassies to the pope, in 792, 794, and 796. At one time, he served an officer of the maritime provinces. He accompanied Charlemagne to Rome in 800 and was one of the
witnesses to his will in 811. There are various traditions concerning Angilbert's relationship with
Bertha, daughter of Charlemagne. One holds that they were married, another that they were not. They had, however, at least one daughter and two sons, one of whom,
Nithard, became a notable figure in the mid-9th century, while their daughter Bertha went on to marry Helgaud II,
Count of Ponthieu. Control of marriage and the meanings of legitimacy were hotly contested in the
Middle Ages. Bertha and Angilbert are an example of how resistance to the idea of a
sacramental marriage could coincide with holding church offices. On the other hand, some historians have speculated that Charlemagne opposed formal marriages for his daughters out of concern for political rivalries from their potential husbands; none of Charlemagne's daughters were married, despite political offers of arranged marriages. In 790, Angilbert retired to the abbey of Centulum, the
monastery of St Richarius () in
Picardy. Elected
abbot in 794, he rebuilt the monastery and endowed it with a library of 200 volumes. It was not uncommon for the
Merovingian,
Carolingian, or later kings to make laymen abbots of monasteries; the layman would often use the income of the monastery as his own and leave the monks a bare minimum for the necessary expenses of the foundation. Angilbert, in contrast, spent a great deal rebuilding Saint-Riquier; when he completed it, Charlemagne spent Easter of the year 800 there. In keeping with Carolingian policies, Angilbert established a school at Saint-Riquier to educate the local boys. ==Poetry==