Beyharting Monastery
The Beyharting Abbey is a former Augustinian Canons - Abbey in the Beyharting district of the Tuntenhausen community in Bavaria in the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising .
history
The convent, consecrated to St. Johannes Baptist, was founded around 1130 by Judith , the widow of Noble Tageo von Pihartingen. There was already a school at the monastery in the 13th century, the extensive, documented library was destroyed in the 19th century. Around 1420 the church and the cloister were Gothicized. Since 1441 there has been a pilgrimage to the Tuntenhausen Madonna, which benefited the income of the monastery. During the Thirty Years War the monastery was sacked by Swedish troops in 1632, 1646 and 1648. Between 1668 and 1670 the church was refurbished and renovated. Around 1730 the church was stuccoed and frescoed by Johann Baptist Zimmermann . The monastery was dissolved in 1803 in the course of secularization . The canons continued to live in the monastery complex until 1807, only then did it become private property, and the monastery church later became the parish church. Since 1997 the monastery buildings have also belonged to the Catholic Parish Church Foundation. During interior renovation work, the bones of the monastery founder were discovered around Easter 2002 and solemnly buried again in the parish church on February 9, 2003. The twelve-year renovation work ended with the solemn benediction of a new popular altar by Archbishop Friedrich Cardinal Wetter on November 20, 2005.
Row of provosts
source
- Hartiwig
- Ulrich I.
- Conrad von Reichersdorf
- Hartuid, 1244, 1251
- Gottfried
- Gottschalk Rehlinger
- Otto I. von Mitterskirchen, 1297
- Otto II von Pienzenau, 1308, 1326
- Friedrich Spielberger, 1328, 1344
- Rupert
- Ulrich II.
- Dietrich, 1355, 1370
- Conrad II. Perwanger
- Conrad III. Grozz
- Ambros I. (unsure)
- Peter Kriechbamer
- Ulrich III. Haslanger, † 1449
- Johann I. Schach, resigned in 1451
- Johann II. Saaldorfer, 1451–1458
- Nicolaus Kneittinger, 1458
- Heinrich Pretschlaipfer, † 1486
- Ulrich IV. Eisenhofer, 1486–1500
- Ambros Treitwein, 1500–1502
- Georg I. Aprecher, 1502–1509
- Pantaleon Hauser, 1509–1536
- Lukas Wagner, 1536–1560
- Peter II. Spächter, 1560–1590
- Wolfgang Lindmayr, 1590–1595
- Conrad IV. Hirschauer, 1595-1616
- Bartholomaeus Furtner, 1616-1623
- Johann II. Gering, 1623–1645
- Christian Scheichenstuhl, 1645–1686
- Augustin Lang, 1686-1696
- Ignaz Wantschl, 1696-1717
- Georg II Mayr, 1718–1740
- Johann IV. Draxl, 1740-1746
- Ildefons Golling, 1746-1749
- George III Rämbsl, 1749–1771
- Corbinian Sarreiter, 1772–1784
- Georg IV. Lachner, 1784–1794
- Joseph Neumayr, 1794–1803, † 1822
See also
- Catholic parish church and former Augustinian canons' church of St. Johann Baptist
literature
- Franz Josef Weppelmann (Hrsg.): Beyharting in the district of Rosenheim: Contributions to the history of the former Augustinian Canon monastery and its church , Konrad, Weißenhorn / Bavaria 2005, ISBN 3-87437-482-3
- Sebastian Meidinger: Historical description of the electoral prince. Main and government cities in Niederbaiern Landshut and Straubing , Landshut 1787, p. 319 ( online )
Web links
-
Beyharting Monastery , basic data and history:
Christine Riedl-Valder: Tuntenhausen, Canons' Monastery Beyharting - Pastor of the Tuntenhausen pilgrimage in the database of monasteries in Bavaria in the House of Bavarian History - official website of the municipality of Tuntenhausen: Beyharting Abbey
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Michael Hartig: Die Oberbayerischen Stifts , Volume I: The Benedictine, Cistercian and Augustinian canons . Publisher vorm. G. J. Manz, Munich 1935, DNB 560552157 , p. 217 f.
Coordinates: 47 ° 55 ′ 26.8 ″ N , 11 ° 59 ′ 26.5 ″ E