Starting not too long after her death, there have been numerous attempts to have Hildegard made a saint but some always went wrong and in the end she was never canonized until last year - one of the last official acts of Benedict XVI.
Sr. Ancilla gave us the lowdown. (See her above in a ceremony where we donated a tree to be planted in their garden.) She is a nun at Eibingen Abbey, the second monastery Hildegard founded. Sr. Ancilla recounted the previous attempts to get Hildegard canonized, including the last attempt in the 1970's, attempts that involved lots of money on the part of the sponsoring group. Now Hildegard has always been considered a saint by the German people, including, it seems, a German pope. In 2010 Benedict gave a series of talks on "St. Hildegard" and the sisters at Hildegard's only existing monastery were quick to point out to the pope that the church had never formally recognized Hildegard. So they were told to get all the documents in again, which they did, and she was rather quickly (for Rome) canonized and made the fourth woman doctor of the church in 2012.
The current Eibingen Abbey was built in the 1900's and is not in the exact spot where Hildegard founded it. We will see that church on Tuesday, September 17, her feast day.
Walking to the Abbey
The Abbey church - but which has none of her relics, a big point of contention I hear.
Statue of Hildegard in front of the church
View from the abbey - the Rhine and across the Rhine the city of Bingen - note also the church of St. Roch on the far hill, which we also visited and which does have relics of Hildegard (a rib & I can't remember what else).
Earlier in the day we visited the site of the first monastery Hildegard founded very close by & across the Nahe River from Bingen a the Nahe flows into the Rhine. Unfortunately, this Rupertsberg convent was destroyed in 1632 by the Swedes.
When they put in this railroad years ago right where the abbey had been, they uncovered the underground crypt of the abbey. We were fortunate to have as our guide Annette Esser, a German Hildegard scholar who studied at Union Theological Seminary and translated Barbara Newman's book on Hildegard into German. Annette has founded with others the Scivias Institute for continued scholarly work on Hildegard and hopefully more money to preserve and make more accessible all sights connected to Hildegard as it is certain that the number of visitors will continue to increase.
Annette stood at the railing to show us the railroad tracks below that cut through what was Hildegard's Rupertsberg monastery that she founded with much protest from the abbot of Disibodenberg.
Here you can see the site of the Rupertsberg monastery on the right.
Here is a painting of how it looked.
And a model of the convent in the museum.
In the crypt of the Rupertsberg monastery
Annette shows us a copy of the edict from the Emperor Barbarosa giving Hildegard perpetual ownership of the land and monastery - even though later Hildegard wrote him scathing letters decrying his role in the papal schisms.
Annette leads us in a psalm in the Rupertsberg crypt.
Going to the Hildegard Museum on the Rhine.
Hildegard's visions as illustrated in her many books.
An herb garden outside the museum with plants described in Hildegard's book.
Side altar at St. Roch's Church in Bingen where some of Hildegard's relics are found.
Our guide Martin Gruger, a Benedictine oblate from Bingen, tells us about the yearly pilgrimage up to St. Roch's by the people of Bingen occasioned by a promise made during the Plague.