Hildegard of Bingen was a German nun, writer, composer, and healer. She was one of the most important thinkers in medieval Europe. She was born in 1098 in a small village in what is now western Germany. Her family were minor nobles. She was the tenth child. At that time, some families gave a child to the Church. This was called a 'tithe', a kind of gift. Hildegard was sent to a small group of religious women when she was about eight. She lived with an older woman called Jutta. Jutta taught her to read and write Latin. Hildegard spent almost her whole life in religious houses. She never travelled far in the usual sense. But her ideas travelled across Europe. From childhood, Hildegard said she saw bright lights. She called these visions. She thought they came from God. For many years she did not tell anyone. She was afraid people would laugh at her. When she was about 42, she finally began to write them down. Her first book, Scivias, took ten years to finish. The Pope himself read parts of it and said it was good work. After Jutta died, Hildegard became the leader of her small group. She then founded a new house for women at Rupertsberg, near the River Rhine. Later she founded a second house at Eibingen. She wrote books on God, on medicine, on plants, and on music. She composed many songs, which are still performed today. She wrote nearly 400 letters. Kings, popes, and abbots asked her for advice. She died on 17 September 1179, aged about 81. The Catholic Church made her a saint in 2012, over 800 years after her death.
Hildegard matters for three reasons. First, she was one of the first named women composers in Western music. Before her, most music in Europe was written by men, or by people whose names are lost. Hildegard's songs have her name on them. We know she wrote them. Her music is strange and beautiful. It uses long, soaring lines. Modern recordings of her work have sold well around the world. She is studied in music schools today.
Second, she was a woman who spoke to power in an age when women rarely did. She wrote to popes, emperors, and bishops. She did not always flatter them. She often told them off. When they did wrong, she said so. She preached in public, which was very unusual for a woman at the time. She got her ideas accepted by the Church, which was ruled by men. She used her claim of divine visions as a kind of shield. If her words came from God, who could stop her from saying them?
Third, she is an early voice for what we now call ecological thinking. She used a Latin word, viriditas, which means 'greenness'. For her, this greenness was the life force that filled all of nature. Trees, plants, rivers, human bodies, all shared in viriditas. When something was cut off from it, it became dry and sick. She thought humans had a duty to care for the natural world, because all of it was alive with God's life. These ideas were unusual in her time. Today many readers find them surprisingly modern. Some scholars now read her as an early theologian of nature.
For a first introduction, the 1982 recording A Feather on the Breath of God by Gothic Voices is the easiest way into Hildegard's music. It is widely available on streaming services. Sabina Flanagan's short biography Hildegard of Bingen: A Visionary Life (1989) is clear and readable. The BBC's In Our Time has an episode on Hildegard. The 2009 film Vision, directed by Margarethe von Trotta, is a thoughtful dramatisation of her life.
For deeper reading, Scivias itself is available in English translation (Columbia Bishop and Jane Bishop, Paulist Press).
The Woman of Her Age (2001) is a strong biography focusing on her music and intellectual world.
St. Hildegard's Theology of the Feminine (1987) is a classic study. The International Society of Hildegard von Bingen Studies keeps a current list of scholarship.
Hildegard was just a mystic who had visions.
She was much more. She wrote serious works on theology, medicine, and nature. She composed music. She ran two convents as a working leader. She went on preaching tours. She wrote almost 400 letters dealing with complex political and religious questions. The vision was her starting point, not her whole life. Reducing her to 'the nun with visions' misses most of what she actually did.
Women had no voice at all in medieval Europe.
The picture is more complex. Women were locked out of most public roles. They could not be priests, judges, or professors. But in some religious contexts, especially as abbesses of large convents, they had real authority. Hildegard was one of several powerful medieval women, including Heloise, Eleanor of Aquitaine, and Christine de Pizan (a bit later). The system was harsh, but a small number of women found ways to lead and write. Hildegard is one of the most striking cases. The picture of medieval women as uniformly silent is too simple.
Her medicine is basically the same as modern medicine.
It is not. Some of her herbal advice is still used today. Some is harmful. Some is based on ideas (like the four humours) that modern science has rejected. The right way to use Hildegard's medical books today is as historical sources, not as guides for serious treatment. A few popular books have claimed that 'Hildegard medicine' can cure modern diseases. This overstates her work. She was a careful medieval healer, not a modern doctor.
Her music was lost and then perfectly recovered.
It is a bit more complicated. Most of her music survives in old manuscripts. But music notation in her time was not as exact as today. We know roughly what notes she wrote. We do not always know the exact rhythm or how voices were used. Modern performances are informed guesses, based on careful study and on what we know of medieval singing. Two recordings of the same song can sound different. This does not mean we have lost her music. It means that medieval music is partly a living tradition of interpretation, not a perfect copy of what Hildegard's nuns sang.
For research-level engagement, the Latin critical editions of Hildegard's works, published in the Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaevalis series, are the scholarly standard. Barbara Newman's later edited volume Voice of the Living Light gathers important essays. For the medical writings, Victoria Sweet's God's Hotel connects Hildegard's medicine to modern clinical practice in a thoughtful way. For the music, Margot Fassler's Cosmos, Liturgy, and the Arts in the Twelfth Century is an important recent study. The Rupertsberg and Eibingen manuscripts are increasingly digitised and available online.
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