Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Löffingen - Winterschnee
Löffingen - Winterschnee
Reichenau - St. Georg
Reichenau - St. Georg
Reichenau - St. Georg
Reichenau - St. Georg
Reichenau - St. Georg
Reichenau - St. Georg
Reichenau - Münster St. Maria und Markus
Reichenau - Münster St. Maria und Markus
Reichenau - Münster St. Maria und Markus
Reichenau - Münster St. Maria und Markus
Reichenau - St. Peter und Paul
Reichenau - St. Peter und Paul
Reichenau - St. Peter und Paul
Reichenau - St. Peter und Paul
Reichenau - St. Peter und Paul
Wasserburg - St. Georg
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach
Alpirsbach
Bad Krozingen - Glöcklehofkapelle
Bad Krozingen - Glöcklehofkapelle
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Alpirsbach - Kloster Alpirsbach


In 1095 three noblemen donated a remote piece of land in the Black Forest to the Order of Saint Benedict in 1095. The monastery, that was founded, was settled by monks from "Kloster St. Blasien". The Bishop of Constance consecrated the first stone oratorio in 1099. In 1101 the monastery was placed under papal protection by Pope Paschal II. Emperor Heinrich V confirmed these rights in 1123. The monastery was strongly influenced by Kloster Hirsau, a centre of the Cluniac Reforms. So the second and third abbots came from Hirsau. The abbey church, a flat-roofed three-aisled basilica with a transept, a choir and side choirs was completed in 1133. It was consecrated three years earlier to Saint Nicholas. The blueprint of the church followed the Cluniac/Hirsau scheme.
The founders had endowed Kloster Alpirsbach with a number of villages when Count Adalbert joined the monastery around 1100, he donated property in the wine-growing Breisgau region. The monastery to prospered and entered an economic boom in the early 15th century. The decline started some decades later and at the end of that century, the abbey was heavily in debt.
In 1522, Alpirsbach's prior Ambrosius Blarer left the monastery after being stripped of his position. Blarer, who had been giving Lutheran sermons at the monastery and had met and befriended the Lutheran reformer Philip Melanchthon, returned to Württemberg in 1534 to become one of Duke Ulrich's chief reformers.
In 1556, Duke Christoph dissolved the monastery. The buildings were used for Protestant seminaries and boarding schools. The Alpirsbach seminary lasted from 1556 to 1595 and taught around 200 students.
Today the former abbey is used for cultural events like concerts and exhibitions. There is as well a very interesting museum.
During the Reformation the Dukes of Wuerttemberg dissolved the monasteries such as Hirsau and Alpirsbach Many works of art, owned by the monasteries, consequently went to Protestant churches. This lectern may have come from Alpirsbach but now has its home in Freudenstadt. As the church in Freudenstadt was under renovation the lectern was brought to Alpirsbach and was on exhibit here for about six months. I was just lucky to see it here.
The lectern is known as a precious masterpiece of Romanesque art. It was carved around 1150 out of willow and linden and painted in different colours. The Evangelists Matthew, Mark, Luke and John bear the cabinet, which is decorated with the Evangelists´symbols. Inside the cabinet is a place for a vessel for incense. The incense would flow out of the four symbols´ mouths.
The valuable lectern is placed in a climate-controlled display.
The founders had endowed Kloster Alpirsbach with a number of villages when Count Adalbert joined the monastery around 1100, he donated property in the wine-growing Breisgau region. The monastery to prospered and entered an economic boom in the early 15th century. The decline started some decades later and at the end of that century, the abbey was heavily in debt.
In 1522, Alpirsbach's prior Ambrosius Blarer left the monastery after being stripped of his position. Blarer, who had been giving Lutheran sermons at the monastery and had met and befriended the Lutheran reformer Philip Melanchthon, returned to Württemberg in 1534 to become one of Duke Ulrich's chief reformers.
In 1556, Duke Christoph dissolved the monastery. The buildings were used for Protestant seminaries and boarding schools. The Alpirsbach seminary lasted from 1556 to 1595 and taught around 200 students.
Today the former abbey is used for cultural events like concerts and exhibitions. There is as well a very interesting museum.
During the Reformation the Dukes of Wuerttemberg dissolved the monasteries such as Hirsau and Alpirsbach Many works of art, owned by the monasteries, consequently went to Protestant churches. This lectern may have come from Alpirsbach but now has its home in Freudenstadt. As the church in Freudenstadt was under renovation the lectern was brought to Alpirsbach and was on exhibit here for about six months. I was just lucky to see it here.
The lectern is known as a precious masterpiece of Romanesque art. It was carved around 1150 out of willow and linden and painted in different colours. The Evangelists Matthew, Mark, Luke and John bear the cabinet, which is decorated with the Evangelists´symbols. Inside the cabinet is a place for a vessel for incense. The incense would flow out of the four symbols´ mouths.
The valuable lectern is placed in a climate-controlled display.
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