Saint Liutberga
Liutberga | |
|---|---|
Miniature of Liutberga from a manuscript copy of her Vita created in the late 15th-century for Abbot Andreas Lang of Michelsberg | |
| Hometown | Salzburg, Prince-Archbishopric of Salzburg |
| Died | c. 870 AD |
| Feast | February 28 |
Saint Liutberga (died c. 870), also spelled Liutbirg and Liutbirga, was an influential nun in Saxony in the 9th century, who ended her life as an anchoress in Windenhausen (or Wendhusen). Her life provides important evidence for female experiences of religion in the ninth-century Carolingian Empire, and also gives some insight into the background of Ottonian convents like Gandersheim and Quedlinburg. A ninth-century saint, Liutberga provided an unexpected new model of holiness, that of the executive housekeeper. St. Liutberga's feast is February 28.