
thumb|Adalram's dedication in the "Muspilli manuscript" Adalram (died 836) was an early 9th-century prelate active in Bavaria. He is known to have been archdeacon of the Salzburg diocese , and in 821 succeeded Arno as Archbishop of Salzburg. In 824, following the request of the emperor Louis the Pious, he received the pallium from Pope Eugenius II.
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thumb|Adalram's dedication in the "Muspilli manuscript" Adalram (died 836) was an early 9th-century prelate active in Bavaria. He is known to have been archdeacon of the Salzburg diocese , and in 821 succeeded Arno as Archbishop of Salzburg. In 824, following the request of the emperor Louis the Pious, he received the pallium from Pope Eugenius II.
As archbishop he continued the attempts to evangelize the Slavs of Upper Pannonia and Carantania, appointing Otto as under-bishop to the Slavs. During his episcopate the church of Nitra in Pannonia (in what is now Slovakia) was dedicated at his instigation. The ruler Pribina had recently taken a Bavarian Christian wife, and this church may have been for her use. He is thought to have died on 4 January 836.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).