Foundation The seventeenth-century Benedictine scholar
Jean Mabillon accepted the traditional founding of Fleury as by Leodebaldus, abbot of St-Aignan (Orléans) about 640, in the existing
Gallo-Roman villa of
Floriacum, in the
Vallis Aurea, the "Golden Valley". This was the spot selected by the Abbot of St-Aignan for his Benedictine foundation. Rigomarus was its first abbot.
Medieval history The most famous of the
Merovingian abbots was
St. Mommolus, who effected the translation of the relics there of
Benedict of Nursia.
Pepin of Herstal, having considerably augmented the abbey, committed it to the direction of
Saint Bain in 706. The monastery underwent a season of reform in its monastic life, about 930, along the lines first laid out at
Cluny. The monastery enjoyed the patronage of the
Carolingian dynasty for generations; it was also central to the political ambitions of the
Robertian house descended from
Robert I of France, several of whom had held the title
Duke of the Franks. The monk of Fleury named
Helgaud (died ca 1068), was chaplain to King
Robert II and wrote a brief
Epitoma vitae Roberti regis. Fleury had particular significance in lending legitimacy to its patrons. Although royal and ducal patronage had material advantages, there was also a price to be paid in terms of monastic autonomy when the ducal candidate conflicted with the choice of the monastic community.
Theodulphus,
bishop of Orléans established at Fleury a school for young noblemen recommended there by
Charlemagne. By the mid-ninth century its library was one of the most comprehensive ever assembled in the West, and scholars such as
Lupus of Ferrières (d. 862) traveled there to consult its texts. Later under St.
Abbo of Fleury (abbot 988-1004), head of the reformed abbey school, Fleury enjoyed a second golden age; it kept up close relations with abbeys in England. The
Fleury Playbook, dating from
c.1200, was long kept at the abbey and may have been composed there.
Decline and revival Later, among the non-resident abbots
in commendam were Cardinals
Odet de Coligny (brother of
Admiral Coligny, the
Huguenot leader) and
Antoine Sanguin in the reign of
François I and
Cardinal Richelieu. The abbey was plundered by Protestant troops in the
Wars of Religion, who melted down the reliquary of St Benedict. The community was revived in 1627, when it was taken over by monks of the reformed
Congregation of St Maur. The church was listed as a historic monument in 1835, enabling its preservation. The monastery is remembered each day at
evensong in
Winchester Cathedral with an additional short said prayer at the conclusion of the responses – the
Fleury Prayer. == Church ==