Martin M. Miles' photos with the keyword: St. Peter und Johannes der Täufer

Berchtesgaden - Provostry

07 Dec 2012 104
The Berchtesgaden monastery was founded in 1102 as community of Augustinian Canons by Count Berengar of Sulzbach, a friend of Henry V. The Canons felt nor safe and comfortable in the wild, wooded area - and gave up the place soon after. They returned with the first Provost Eberwin around 1120 - and started a success story. The monastery became an Imperial abbey in already 1194. In 1380 the provosts achieved the status of an ecclesistical "Reichsfuerst" and in the 1550s they even held a direct vote in the Reichstag assembly as "Prince-Provosts". From the very beginning upto the secularisation of the monastery in 1803 it was open only for the offsprings of noble families, what actually created this political power. In 1810 the territory of the former monastery fell to the newly established Kingdom of Bavaria, so that the House of Wittelsbach could finally transform the monastic buildings into a summer palace. The former collegiate church "St. Peter and St. John the Baptist" serves as a parish church since 1803. The naves were completed around 1200, the apse added 100 years later. The structure got a vaulting 1515. The youngest parts are the impressive, neo-Romanesque towers, which were added 1864/66.

Berchtesgaden - Provostry

07 Dec 2012 137
The Berchtesgaden monastery was founded in 1102 as community of Augustinian Canons by Count Berengar of Sulzbach, a friend of Henry V. The Canons felt nor safe and comfortable in the wild, wooded area - and gave up the place soon after. They returned with the first Provost Eberwin around 1120 - and started a success story. The monastery became an Imperial abbey in already 1194. In 1380 the provosts achieved the status of an ecclesistical "Reichsfuerst" and in the 1550s they even held a direct vote in the Reichstag assembly as "Prince-Provosts". From the very beginning upto the secularisation of the monastery in 1803 it was open only for the offsprings of noble families, what actually created this political power. In 1810 the territory of the former monastery fell to the newly established Kingdom of Bavaria, so that the House of Wittelsbach could finally transform the monastic buildings into a summer palace. The former collegiate church "St. Peter and St. John the Baptist" serves as a parish church since 1803. This door leads from the church down to the cloister, so that the noble Canons had a shortcut from their rooms to the choir stalls inside the church. The door is guarded by this a large lion, with a really impressing mane.

Berchtesgaden - Provostry

07 Dec 2012 119
The Berchtesgaden monastery was founded in 1102 as community of Augustinian Canons by Count Berengar of Sulzbach, a friend of Henry V. The Canons felt nor safe and comfortable in the wild, wooded area - and gave up the place soon after. They returned with the first Provost Eberwin around 1120 - and started a success story. The monastery became an Imperial abbey in already 1194. In 1380 the provosts achieved the status of an ecclesistical "Reichsfuerst" and in the 1550s they even held a direct vote in the Reichstag assembly as "Prince-Provosts". From the very beginning upto the secularisation of the monastery in 1803 it was open only for the offsprings of noble families, what actually created this political power. In 1810 the territory of the former monastery fell to the newly established Kingdom of Bavaria, so that the House of Wittelsbach could finally transform the monastic buildings into a summer palace. The former collegiate church "St. Peter and St. John the Baptist" serves as a parish church since 1803. This door leads from the church down to the cloister, where I stand now, so that the noble Canons had a shortcut from their rooms to the choir stalls inside the church. The door is guarded by a large lion. A pride of fierce lions loiters all around the cloister - since more than 800 years.

Berchtesgaden - Provostry

08 Dec 2012 127
The Berchtesgaden monastery was founded in 1102 as community of Augustinian Canons by Count Berengar of Sulzbach, a friend of Henry V. The Canons felt nor safe and comfortable in the wild, wooded area - and gave up the place soon after. They returned with the first Provost Eberwin around 1120 - and started a success story. The monastery became an Imperial abbey in already 1194. In 1380 the provosts achieved the status of an ecclesistical "Reichsfuerst" and in the 1550s they even held a direct vote in the Reichstag assembly as "Prince-Provosts". From the very beginning upto the secularisation of the monastery in 1803 it was open only for the offsprings of noble families, what actually created this political power. In 1810 the territory of the former monastery fell to the newly established Kingdom of Bavaria, so that the House of Wittelsbach could finally transform the monastic buildings into a summer palace. The former collegiate church "St. Peter and St. John the Baptist" serves as a parish church since 1803. This elegant lion, holding down a strange beast with his paws, was probably once placed outside the cloister, where it is now. It has a kind of saddle on his back, as probably he was the base of a pillar, flanking a portal.

Berchtesgaden - Provostry

09 Dec 2012 119
The Berchtesgaden monastery was founded in 1102 as community of Augustinian Canons by Count Berengar of Sulzbach, a friend of Henry V. The Canons felt nor safe and comfortable in the wild, wooded area - and gave up the place soon after. They returned with the first Provost Eberwin around 1120 - and started a success story. The monastery became an Imperial abbey in already 1194. In 1380 the provosts achieved the status of an ecclesistical "Reichsfuerst" and in the 1550s they even held a direct vote in the Reichstag assembly as "Prince-Provosts". From the very beginning upto the secularisation of the monastery in 1803 it was open only for the offsprings of noble families, what actually created this political power. In 1810 the territory of the former monastery fell to the newly established Kingdom of Bavaria, so that the House of Wittelsbach could finally transform the monastic buildings into a summer palace. The former collegiate church "St. Peter and St. John the Baptist" serves as a parish church since 1803. The most important piece of architecture (for me) is the cloister, At least most of it survived all the time, and even when the House of Wittelsbach converted the provostry into a summer palace, the old closter stayed untouched.