Kochel Monastery

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Kochel Monastery or Kochelsee Monastery is a former women's monastery of the Benedictine order in the municipality of Kochel am See in Bavaria.

history

The monastery was founded around 740 by the brothers Waldram, Eliland and Landfrid , Counts of Antdorf an der Loisach from the Huosi family , together with the Benediktbeuern monastery , where Landfrid became the first abbot, and six other monasteries (the male convents Schlehdorf , Seiferstetten , Sandau , Wessobrunn and the two women's monasteries Polling and Staffelsee ). As an indirect confirmation of the founding of the monastery around 740, an old document has been viewed, which says: " In Buren et Sledorf, Monachi, in Cochalone Sanctimoniales ..." ("In Bauarn and Schlehdorf monks, in Kochel nuns ..."). The three founders appointed her sister Gailsuinda as the first abbess in Kochel .

In the year 752 Gisela, the wife of Childerich III. , assigned to the monastery. She donated valuable manuscripts to the monastery. Around 788 Luitburga , Tassilo's wife , entered the Kochel monastery after the duke had been defeated by the Franks, deposed by Charlemagne and Bavaria had lost its independence. A few years before the death of Charlemagne, his sister Gisela († 810) is said to have lived in Kochel Monastery , who died there and was also buried. Gisela von Bayern is said to have found shelter as a nun in the monastery for a while .

The Kochel women's monastery was destroyed by the Hungarians in 908 (955 at the latest) and never completely rebuilt except for the church.

literature

  • Josef Hemmerle : The Benedictine Abbey Benediktbeuern . De Gruyter, Berlin and New York 1991, in particular p. 80 ff. ( Full text [PDF; 12.3 MB; accessed on June 24, 2017]).

Individual evidence

  1. Johannes Aventinus : Beyerische Chronica . Third book, Frankfurt am Main 1566, double page CCCXVII, left column .
  2. a b Joseph Ernst von Koch-Sternfeld : The fishing (the jus piscandi ) in Bavaria and Austria above the Enns according to the most ancient land law; juxtaposed pragmatically: the "fish woad in the Bavarian lakes according to cultural-historical sketches by Hartwig Peetz : Munich 1862" . Munich 1863, footnote 4 on p. 19 ( digitized in the Google book search).
  3. cf. Angelus March: From the ancient Benedictine monastery, and later secular choir-gentlemen's monasteries Ilmmünster in Upper Bavaria . In: Treatises of the Electoral-Baier Academy of Sciences , Volume 10, Munich 1776, p. 312 ( digitized in the Google book search).
  4. ^ Leo Weber : Benediktbeuern Monastery . In: Großer Kunstführer , Schnell & Steiner, Volume 23, p. 4; the town of Laingruben was given its later name Benediktbeuern on November 30, 1865, derived from the Buron / Benediktbeuern monastery.
  5. Latin sources from Martin Zeiller : Tractatus De X. Circulis Imperii Romano-Germanici. Ulm 1665, p. 230 and p. 244–245 ( digitized in the Google book search).
  6. ^ Philippe Macquer, Peter von Osterwald and Ferdinand Sterzing: Chronological introduction to church history from the French . Second part: VIII. To XII. Century , Munich 1771, p. 45 ( digitized in the Google book search).
  7. ^ Joseph von Hefner: Achievements of the Benediktbeuern monastery for science and art . Munich 1841, pp. 2–4 ( digitized in the Google book search).
  8. ^ A b Johann Wolfgang Melchinger: Geographical Statistical-Topographical Lexicon of Bavaria . Volume 2, Ulm 1796, columns 63-64 ( digitized in the Google book search).
  9. ^ Johann Erhard Fischer: The introduction of Christianity in the current Kingdom of Bavaria . Augsburg 1863, p. 550 ( digitized in the Google book search).
  10. Erpold Lindenbrog: New enlarged Chronica by Carolo Magno . Hamburg 1593, p. 19.
  11. Johannes Aventinus: Beyerische Chronica . Frankfurt am Main 1566, double page CCCXXI, left column.
  12. ^ Heinrich Bünting and Johannes Letzner: Braunschweig-Lüneburgische Chronica . Braunschweig 1722, p. 61 ( digitized in the Google book search).