crypt This monastery was founded in 717 by Widerad, who richly endowed it. According to the authors of the
Gallia Christiana the new abbey, placed under the patronage of
Saint Praejectus (Prix),
Bishop of Clermont, and martyr, was erected on the site of an ancient monastic foundation, dating, it is said, from the time of
Clovis, and formerly under the patronage of
Saint Peter, who as patron eventually overshadowed and superseded Saint Prix.
Pope John VIII dedicated the new church about the year 877, from which time the patronage of Peter appears to have prevailed definitively. The fame of Flavigny was due partly to the
relics which it preserved, and partly to the piety of its monks. The monastery was at the height of its reputation in the eighth century, in the time of the Abbot Manasses, who was appointed by
Pippin the Short. In 755 Manasses transferred from
Volvic to Flavigny the relics of Saint Praejectus. is narrated in a contemporary account. In 877, Adalgar, the
bishop of Autun (875–94), took control of Flavigny and appointed Wolfard as its abbot. This man was a brother-in-law of the
Emperor Louis II and had been ordained by the pope. In 880 or 881 he signed a charter of King
Carloman II as the royal "protochancellor". After his death, only rectors were appointed to rule Flavigny on the bishop's behalf. The rector Girfred was accused of poisoning Adalgar at Tournus on his way to Rome. Adalgar's successors,
Walo (894–919) and
Hervé (919–935), continued to rule Flavigny. Walo and Hervé were the brother and son, respectively, of Count
Manasses of Autun. Episcopal rule at Flavigny continued under Bishops Rotmund (935–68),
Gerald (968–77) and
Walter (977–1018). Rotmund returned to the practice of appointing abbots, and of these he himself appointed no less than four. One abbot, Fulcher, was also abbot of Saint-Bénigne. Another, Milo, a nephew of the prelate Adrald, continued on as abbot under Bishops Gerald and Walter. When Milo died, Walter appoint Robert, a relative of the
counts of Nevers, in his place, but Robert was removed for incompetence and transferred to the priory of Corbigny. The next abbot to be appointed, Heldric, was a
Cluniac monk who restored regular monastic life to Flavigny. He was simultaneously abbot of Môutier-Saint-Jean and
Saint-Germain-d'Auxerre. Heldric's successor, Amadeus, restored abbatial control over Corbigny and established new monastic houses at
Couches,
Semur and
Beaulieu. His successor, Aymo (
c. 1040), was forced to resign by
Pope Leo IX on account of
simony. Aymo died on 26 December, year unknown. His successor, Odo I, a monk from
Montiéramey, resigned after only two years in office and died on 26 August, year unknown. After the abbacy of Raynald (1084–90), a brother of Duke
Odo I of Burgundy, the post was vacant for seven years (except for the two-month rule of one Elmuin). After this interregnum, the Abbot
Hugh succeeded to the office. He wrote a
Chronicle, a
Martyrology and a
Necrology, but according to church historian
Henri Leclercq they "have either perished or contain few facts of real interest". Hugh owed his appointment to the influence of Archbishop
Hugh of Lyon and Bishop Agano of Autun. After many conflicts, Abbot Hugh was forced to resign in 1100. His replacement was the prior, Girard. The monastery was rebuilt in the 17th century and occupied by Benedictines of the
Congregation of St. Maur, who were actively employed in research concerning the historical documents of the abbey, but the results of their studies were lost during the
French Revolution, when the abbey was
dissolved. ==The anise factory==