- Banz Abbey
Banz Abbey (Kloster Banz), now known as Banz Castle (Schloss Banz), is a former Benedictine monastery, since 1978 a part of the town of
Bad Staffelstein north ofBamberg ,Bavaria ,Germany .History
The abbey was founded in about
1070 by Countess Alberada ofSchweinfurt and her husband, Count Hermann of Habsberg-Kastl, and until the secularisation of 1803 was the oldest monastery on the upperMain .In the late middle ages and until 1575 only members of the nobility were accepted as monks.
After the
Thirty Years' War the abbey had to be re-built. The abbots Eucharius Weiner and Kilian Düring commissioned JohannLeonhard Dientzenhofer and after his death in 1707, his brotherJohann Dientzenhofer . Construction began in 1698.In 1719 the church was consecrated, a masterpiece ofBaroque design. The interior is unexpectedly built, not with right angles, but with a series of ellipses. The main altar, the chancel and the statues of saints in the church and on the facade are by Balthasar Esterbauer; the ceiling frescoes are by Melchior Steidl. The choir stalls were made by the courtcabinet maker and ebonist of Schönborn, Johann Georg Nesstfell.In the second half of the 18th century Banz Abbey was known throughout the Holy Roman Empire as a place of Catholic enlightenment and for the scholarship of its monks. This did not save it from secularisation and dissolution in 1803.
After dissolution
In 1813
Wilhelm, Duke in Bavaria , acquired the former abbey premises, which were thereafter known as Schloss Banz ("Banz Castle").In 1933
Ludwig Wilhelm, Duke in Bavaria , sold the buildings to the Community of the Holy Angels ("Gemeinschaft von den heiligen Engeln"), an order dedicated to the spiritual care of expatriate Germans. Since 1978 the former monastery has been in the possession of theHanns Seidel Foundation , an organisation closely associated with the political party the CSU in Bavaria, and is used as a conference centre.It also accommodates a collection of fossils and other curiosities, such as
Egypt ianmummies .References
*Dippold, G., 1991. "Kloster Banz. Natur, Kultur, Architektur." Staffelstein: Obermain Buch- und Bildverlag.
*Wüst, W., 2001. "Kloster Banz als ein benediktinisches Modell. Zur Stiftsstaatlichkeit in Franken." in: "Zeitschrift für bayerische Kirchengeschichte" 70 (2001), pp. 44-72.ee also
*
External links
* [http://www.klosterbanz.de Kloster Banz Official website]
*de icon [http://www.datenmatrix.de/projekte/hdbg/kloster/html-data/geschichte_ks0048.php Klöster in Bayern: Kloster Banz]
* [http://www.mgl-obermaingeschichte.de/barock/SeitenBanz/Banz1.htm History of the Upper Main: Banz]
*de icon [http://www.hss.de/4349.shtml Hanns-Seidel-Stiftung, Kloster Banz]:"This article is translated from the equivalent on the German Wikipedia"
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