depicting
Christ, Gotthard and
Epiphanius. Hildesheim, St. Godehard Basilica. Gotthard's successors in the episcopate of Hildesheim, Bertold (1119–30) and
Bernhard I (1130–53), pushed for his
canonization. Veneration of Gotthard spread to
Scandinavia,
Switzerland, and
Eastern Europe. Gotthard was invoked against fever,
dropsy, childhood sicknesses,
hailstones, the pain of childbirth, and
gout.
Niederaltaich Abbey made its famous abbot the
patron saint of the abbey's well-known grammar school, the
St.-Gotthard-Gymnasium. Gotthard also became the patron saint of traveling merchants, and thus many churches and chapels were dedicated to him in the
Alps. According to an ancient
Ticinese tradition, the little church in
St. Gotthard Pass (
San Gottardo) in the
Swiss Alps was founded by
Galdino,
Archbishop of Milan (r. 1166-76). Goffredo da Bussero, however, attributes the founding of the church to
Enrico da Settala, Bishop of Milan from 1213 to 1230. The hospice was entrusted to the care of the
Capuchin Order in 1685 by
Federico Visconti, and later passed under the control of a
confraternity of Ticino. ==See also==