Arnold I of Vaucourt
Arnold I of Vaucourt , was the Archbishop of Trier from 1169 to 1183. He took a pro-Imperial position in the Investiture Controversy of the twelfth century. As archbishop, Arnold was accounted a capable ruler, by turns thrifty and generous, with a genuine concern for his church and his domain.
Born into the Rhenish nobility of the upper Lorraine, Arnold was most likely the child of the Lord Wirich of Vaucourt, and thus related to several celebrated personalities of the time. He was a capitular of the cathedral of Trier and Provost of St. Andrew's Church in Köln, later becoming a canon of the Aachen Cathedral as well. In 1169 he was elected as Archbishop of Trier at the wish of the Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa, to whom Arnold proved a clever counselor and a loyal and doughty partisan throughout his life, accompanying his master on several campaigns into Italy. While on one of these Italian sojourns, Arnold took part in the Third Lateran Council in 1179.
He took a particular interest in building up the ecclesiastical structures of his bishopric. On June 1, 1178 he presided over the consecration of the Romanesque Abbey of Himmerod. In 1181 he documented that the Seligenstatt Monastery in Seck had been donated to the Archmonastery of Trier.
In 1180, Arnold granted permission to the Vogt of Merzig, to reconstruct the fortress on the Sciva fell on the Saar River near Mettlach, calling the new castle Montclair. This unfortunately gave the first impulse to a struggle between Arnold's German kin, who claimed the castle as a family fief, and the Archbishops of Trier, who claimed it as a dependency of the archbishopric; their strife lasted some two centuries, culminating in the devastation of Montclair under Archbishop Baldwin of Luxembourg.
Upon Arnold's death in Trier in May 1183, the succession to the Archbishopric fell into dispute between Folmar of Karden and Rudolf of Wied.