- Waldsassen Abbey
Infobox Former Country
native_name = "Reichsabtei Waldsassen"
conventional_long_name = Imperial Abbey of Waldsassen
common_name = Waldsassen Abbey|
continent = Europe
region = Central Europe
country = Germany
era = Middle Ages
status = Abbey
empire = Holy Roman Empire
government_type = Theocracy|
year_start = 1147
year_end = 1803|
event_pre = Abbey founded
date_pre =1128 –32
event_start = Gained "Reichsfrei heit"
date_start =
event_end = Secularised to Bavaria
date_end = |
p1 = Electoral Palatinate
image_p1 =
s1 = Electorate of Bavaria
flag_s1 = Flag of Bavaria (lozengy).svg||
image_map_caption = |
capital = Waldsassen|
footnotes =Waldsassen Abbey is a
Cistercian nunnery, formerly a Cistercian monastery, located on the RiverWondreb atWaldsassen nearTirschenreuth ,Oberpfalz inBavaria ,Germany , close to the border with theCzech Republic .First foundation
The monastery, the first Cistercian foundation in Bavaria, was founded by Gerwich of Wolmundstein, a
Benedictine monk ofSigeberg Abbey , with the permission of his former abbot Kuno, thenBishop of Regensburg , and built between1128 and1132 . The original community was sent to Waldsassen fromVolkenroda Abbey inThuringia , of the line ofMorimond Abbey . The first abbot was elected in1133 .Soon the abbey became one of the most renowned and powerful of the times. As the number of monks increased, several important foundations were made at
Sedlitz andOssegg inBohemia , atWalderbach , near Regensburg, and in other places. In1147 , Conrad III,King of Germany , granted it "reichsunmittelbar " status, making it anImperial abbey . Several of its thirty-seven abbots up to the Reformation were illustrious for sanctity and learning; of them, Herman, the seventh abbot, and John, the seventeenth, as well as Gerwich, its founder, and Wigand, the first prior, are commemorated in the menology.From the middle of the
14th century , Waldsassen alternated between periods of prosperity and decadence. Wars, famines, excessive taxation, and persecution by theHussites made it suffer much. During theBavarian War (1504 ) the monastery, church and farm-buildings were burned, but immediately afterwards rebuilt, and the new church was consecrated in1517 .In
1525 , during thePeasants' War , part of the buildings were again destroyed, and were beautifully restored by Georg III (1531 –37), the last of the first series of abbots.From
1537 to1560 in the course of theReformation administrators were appointed by the civil authorities:Frederick III, Elector Palatine , named his brother Richard for this office. The monks were then forced to apostatize or flee, or were put to death. For about a hundred years it remained in this condition, during which time it was almost totally burned down in theThirty Years' War .After the
Peace of Westphalia Roman Catholicism was restored in Bavaria. In1669 , Waldsassen was restored to the Cistercians, and in 1690 Albrecht, first of the second series of abbots (who were six in number), was elected. The buildings were sumptuously rebuilt, and the number of religious again became considerable. The abbey became well-known for its hospitality, particularly during the famines of1702 –03 and1772 –73, and during theFrench Revolution . Under Abbot Athanasius (1793 –1803 ) science and learning were highly cultivated.When the monastery was dissolved and secularised under the "
Reichsdeputationshauptschluss " of1803 it had over eighty members, who were dispersed with State pensions.Second foundation
In
1863 , the remains of the old abbey were bought by theCistercian nuns ofSeligenthal , who in the following year took possession, established monastic enclosure, and opened an institute for theeducation of girls . At first a priory, the nunnery was raised to the status of an abbey in1925 .The church was declared a
basilica minor in1969 .The spectacular
Baroque library is particularly noteworthy. Part of the former monastic premises now accommodates an International Ceramics Museum.Sources
* [http://www.abtei-waldsassen.de Official website]
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.