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Weissenburg Abbey

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Weissemburg Abbey ( German : Kloster Weißenburg , French : L'abbaye de Wissembourg ), also Wissembourg Abbey , is a former Benedictine abbey (1524–1789: collegiate church ) in Wissembourg in Alsace , France .

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22-566: Weissenburg Abbey may refer to: Weissenburg Abbey, Alsace , a former German Benedictine monastery in Alsace, France Weissenburg Abbey, Bavaria , a former Carmelite monastery in Bavaria, Germany Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Weissenburg Abbey . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

44-460: A feudal system in which the estates were granted as fiefs , that resulted in the loss of most of the abbey's possessions. This was because, over time, their vassal viewed their fiefs as allods , i.e. as freehold properties. Thus the once extensive monastic estates increasingly evaporated. In the 16th century only three estates were left out of the thousands the abbey used to possess: these were Steinfeld, Schweighofen and Koppelhof; in addition,

66-524: A milestone in the development of German language and literature. it is the first poem to employ rhyme instead of the old Germanic alliteration, though the rhyme is still very imperfect, being often mere assonance, with frequent traces of alliteration. At that time the abbey was in the charge of Abbot Grimald of Weissenburg , who was also the Abbot of the Abbey of Saint Gall and chancellor to Emperor Louis

88-630: Is currently held in the Speyer State Archives ( Landesarchiv Speyer ). Edelin is credited with building the Gothic abbey church , which still stands today. The church incorporated a Romanesque bell tower, the sole remains of the earlier church built in the 11th century under the direction of abbot Samuel. (The church is on the Route Romane d'Alsace .) He also oversaw the construction of a refectory and subterranean furnaces to warm

110-717: The Edelsass Chronicle ( Edelsasser Chronik ) as follows: Das Closter Weissenburg Sanct Benedicten Ordens ist der mächtigsten und ältesten Clöszters eines in Teutschland gewesen; wird unter die vier Abteyen des Römischen Reichs gezahlt, ward gebauen in dem Elsass an dem Berg Vogeseo in der Reichsstatt Weissenburg bey dem Fluss die Lautter genannt, welche mitten durch die Staat fleusst, an einem lustigen Ort des Bistumbs; die Alten haben es Witzenburg oder der Weisheit Burg genannt, dieweil die Münch solches Closters jederzeit in guter Lehr gehalten worden. Weissenburg Abbey, of

132-540: The German , and thus was one of the most important figures in the whole of the German imperial church. The abbey lost an important possession, however, when in 985 the Salian Duke Otto appropriated 68 of the parishes belonging to it in the so-called Salian Church Robbery ( Salischer Kirchenraub ). Above all though, it was the transition from a situation in which the abbey managed its monastic estates itself to

154-667: The Luitpoldings, and Otto lost the duchy. He retained the ducal title as "duke of Worms ", received the Kaiserpfalz of Lautern and seized large estates of Wissembourg ( Weißenburg ) Abbey in compensation. Upon the death of Duke Henry II of Bavaria in 995, Otto again received the Duchy of Carinthia and the March of Verona . When Emperor Otto III died in 1002, Otto of Worms and Duke Henry IV of Bavaria were candidates for

176-762: The Order of Saint Benedict, has become the mightiest and oldest monastery in Germany; it is one of the four abbeys of the Roman Empire, was built in the Alsace in the Vosges Mountains in the imperial town of Weissenburg by the river called the Lautter, which flows through the middle of the town, in a pleasant part of the Bishopric; the old [folk] called it Witzenburg or Weisheit Castle ["Wisdom Castle"] because

198-616: The Red , duke of Lotharingia . Otto's mother died three years after he was born and Otto lived much of his early life in his grandfather's court until the emperor's death in 973. His maternal uncle, Otto II , ascended the Imperial throne. Otto of Worms is first documented as a count in the Nahegau about 956. He also held the Speyergau and Wormsgau , as well as several other counties in

220-534: The abbey had tithe rights in Weissenburg and Bergzabern which gave it an annual income of 1,500 gulden . In 1262–1293, during the time of its decline, Abbot Edelin (d. 15 October 1293) attempted to halt the loss of the monastic estates and to recover its stolen property by compiling a record of the abbey's possessions in a new register. This index, called the Codex Edelini or Liber Possessionum ,

242-591: The area. In 978, Emperor Otto II appointed him duke of Carinthia and margrave of Verona , after his Luitpolding predecessor, Henry the Younger , had unsuccessfully rebelled against the Imperial authority during the War of the Three Henries and was deposed. In 985, however, Emperor Otto's widow, Empress Theophanu , in order to gain support for the succession of their minor son, Otto III , restored Carinthia to

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264-637: The confusion of the revolutionary period. An annual Christmas fair is held on weekends in Advent, in the area around the church. In 1764 the secular state of the Princely Propstei of Weissenburg comprised the following offices and estates (in today's spelling): Towards the end of the 18th century the territories of the Propstei of Weissenburg covered 28 square miles with 50,000 inhabitants. In his abbey chronicle which first appeared in 1551,

286-401: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Weissenburg_Abbey&oldid=604149526 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Weissenburg Abbey, Alsace Weissenburg Abbey

308-691: The monastery. Around 1465 Nikolaus Gerhaert carved a series of four reliquaries from walnut for the abbey. That of Saint Agnes is now at Anglesey Abbey ; (Saints Barbara and Catherine are in the Metropolitan Museum in New York and the St Margaret in the Art Institute of Chicago.) In 1524, the abbey, now entirely destitute, was turned into a secular collegiate church at the instigation of its last abbot, Rüdiger Fischer, which

330-501: The monks had always received good teaching there. 49°2′13″N 7°56′32″E  /  49.03694°N 7.94222°E  / 49.03694; 7.94222 Otto I of Carinthia Otto I (c. 950 – 4 November 1004), called Otto of Worms , a member of the Salian dynasty , was Duke of Carinthia from 978 to 985 and again from 1002 until his death. Otto was the only son of Liutgarde , daughter of Emperor Otto I , and Conrad

352-523: The new king of Germany ; Otto withdrew from the election and received the Duchy of Carinthia from Henry in return. Nevertheless, he was forced to cede his Rhenish possessions to his long-time rival Bishop Burchard of Worms . Otto died two years later, he was succeeded as Carinthian duke by his son, Conrad . Otto married Judith (died 991), probably a granddaughter of Duke Arnulf the Bad of Bavaria. They had

374-468: The source for the abbots before Adalbertus (No. 23) he discloses that he was given this information by the Bishop of Speyer of that time). With that ends the series of abbots. The provosts of the collegiate church were identical with the bishops of Speyer . Source: Caspar Bruschius: Chronologia monasteriorum Gemaniae praecipuorum, Sulzbach, 1681 In 1592 Bernhart Hertzog wrote about Weissenburg Abbey in

396-439: The theologian and historian, Kaspar Brusch , left a record of the abbots of Weissenburg, which appears to be partly fictitious (at least for the abbots who presided before Dragobodo - to wit the rather stylized name of the supposed first abbot, "Principius"). In addition Brusch suggests this himself ( "Nihil enim de his Abbatibus primis aliud scriptum reperi, quorum seriem etiam ac successionem aliquid erroris habere non dubito" . As

418-685: Was founded in 661 by the Bishop of Speyer , Dragobodo . The name Wissembourg is a Gallicized version of Weißenburg (Weissenburg) in German meaning "white castle". Thanks to donations from the nobility and local landowners the monastery quickly acquired possessions and estates in the Alsace , Electorate of the Palatinate and in the west-Rhine county of Ufgau . As a result, manorial farms and peasant farmsteads were set up and agriculture system introduced to create fertile arable farmland. Around 1100, it

440-615: Was important for the monastery, which had now become wealthy, to distance itself from the Bishop of Speyer and his influence. To this end a new tradition was established about the origins of the monastery, backed up by forged documents (such forgery was not anything unusual in the Middle Ages). In the case of Weissenburg, the story now ran that the abbey had been founded in 623 by the Merovingian king, Dagobert I . Detailed historic research in recent decades has demonstrated that this

462-940: Was then united with the Bishopric of Speyer in 1546. The princely provost of Weissenberg had an individual vote in the Reichsfürstenrat of the Reichstag of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation . In the wake of the French Revolution the foundation was dissolved in 1789. Part of the monastic library went in the 17th century to the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbüttel , the abbey records largely perished in

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484-537: Was unlikely to have been the case. Weissenburg developed quickly into one of the wealthiest and culturally most significant abbeys in Germany. As early as 682 it was able to purchase shares in a saltworks in Vic-sur-Seille for the princely sum of 500 solidi ; in 760 it was given the Mundat Forest . The Gospel Book ( Evangelienbuch ) written around 860 by a monk, Otfrid of Weissenburg , represented

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