Goldsmith and Royal Counsellor
Eligius was sent in his youth to the goldsmith Abbo, master of the mint at Limoges, and afterward entered the service of the royal treasury in Neustria. Tradition relates that King Clotaire II commissioned him to make a throne and, finding that Eligius had fashioned a second from the same materials rather than keep the surplus, recognized both his skill and his integrity. The king appointed him master of the mint at Marseille, and coins bearing his name survive from this period.
Under King Dagobert I, Eligius became a chief counsellor and was entrusted with diplomatic missions, holding such influence that, by the accounts of his life, envoys would seek his favor before approaching the king. He continued in royal service until Dagobert's death in 639. Throughout this time he is remembered for charity, using his wealth to ransom captives and slaves brought to the markets of Gaul and to give alms to the poor.
Bishop and Missionary
After the death of Dagobert, during the regency that followed, Eligius left the court and was ordained to the priesthood, and was consecrated Bishop of Noyon-Tournai. His see embraced territories in Flanders, and he devoted roughly two decades to the conversion of the Flemings, Frisians, and other peoples of the North Sea coast, preaching against pagan practices and superstitions and directing his converts toward Christian life.
While still at court he had adopted ascetic, semi-monastic practices following the Irish monastic tradition, and he was a notable founder of religious houses. He established the monastery of Solignac near Limoges, founded around 631-632 on land granted by King Dagobert, and a convent at Noyon. He is also remembered for crafting gold chalices and reliquaries and for honoring the relics of earlier saints, translating the relics of Piatus of Tournai and the Irish missionary Fursey.
Repose and Veneration
Saint Eligius reposed on December 1, 660, at Noyon, where he was buried. His life was recorded by his close friend Audoin (Ouen) of Rouen in the Vita Sancti Eligii, an important source for the Merovingian period. His relics were the object of veneration and underwent several translations in later centuries.
He is widely honored as the patron of goldsmiths, metalworkers, and other craftsmen, as well as of those who work with horses and cattle. As a saint of the pre-schism Western Church, he is venerated in the Orthodox tradition as an example of one who used worldly skill, wealth, and influence in the service of God and the poor.