St. Zeno Monastery (Isen)

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Engraving by Michael Wening around 1700

St. Zeno is a former Benedictine monastery and later collegiate monastery in Isen in Bavaria in the Diocese of Freising .

history

St. Zeno in Isen was founded by members of the Fagana , a local noble family, and Bishop Joseph von Freising in the 8th century. The monastery was given gifts by Duke Odilo and nobles close to him. It was one of the oldest monasteries (at first only cella ) on old Bavarian soil. It was a Benedictine monastery until the beginning of the 12th century , then a collegiate monastery . The monastery was dissolved in 1802 in the course of secularization . The seven canonical courts and the monastery buildings went into private ownership with the exception of the parish and cooperator house .

The former monastery church is now used as a parish church.

Row of provosts

source

  • Hochold, 1129, 1158
  • Berthold Graf von Berg, 1169, 1180
  • Ulrich I, 1194
  • Pabo von Frickendorf, 1212
  • Gerold, 1219
  • Conrad I., 1221, 1235
  • Conrad II. Rauhgraf, 1251
  • Berengar, 1260
  • Heinrich von Puetelbach, 1267, † 1284
  • Conrad III. von Bruckberg, 1283, 1290
  • Hugo, 1296
  • Burkhard von Zangberg, 1306, 1317
  • Hermann von Nannhofen, 1320, 1326
  • Ulrich II of Achdorf, 1331, 1353
  • Wernher vonochenheim, 1353-1357
  • Erhard von Gumppenberg, 1357-1374
  • Hildebrand von Weichs, 1378, 1382
  • Wilhelm Schenk von Geyern, 1384
  • Thomas von Grunertshofen, 1389, † 1392
  • Ulrich Waller, 1395, † 1414
  • Johann I. Gruenwalder, 1414-1421
  • Oswald Mengersreuter, 1424
  • Georg I of Achdorf, 1451
  • Ladislaus von Achdorf, 1451–1463
  • Sixtus von Tannberg, 1463–1474
  • Peter Riedler, 1474–1504
  • Bertholomäus Riedler, 1506–1510
  • Gabriel Riedler, 1510–1524
  • Leo Lösch, 1524–1552
  • Anton von Alberstorf, 1552–1560
  • Johann II. Pfister von Schoeneck, 1560–1582
  • Georg II Mayr, 1583–1586
  • Balthasar Koenig, 1586–1598
  • Sebastian Franz, 1598-1605
  • Anton Welser, 1606–1618
  • Johann III. Baptist Rembel, 1618-1628
  • Melchior Khlesl , 1626-1630
  • Ernst Adalbert von Harrach , 1630–1632
  • John IV Baptist Bunsholtis de Puccinis, 1632–1652
  • John V Batholomäus de Puccinis, 1655
  • Max Ernst Graf von Scherffenberg , 1664–1713
  • Franz Ignaz Anton Mayer, 1730–1760
  • Ludwig Josef Freiherr von Welden, 1761–1769
  • Max Josef Anton Count von Trauner, 1769–1775
  • Josef Anton Freiherr von Westernach, 1775–1793
  • Damian Hugo Graf von Lehrbach, 1793–1803

literature

  • Das Erkantliche Isen Or Das in nine, held by different famous oratoribus, speeches of praise, thanks and honor, presented glorious thousand-year-old jubilee, As the high-respectable ancient pen all there that experienced from its origin the thousandth year, and from the establishment of The praiseworthy brotherhood of Jesus Maria Joseph Acquired a hundred-year-old Saeculum Bey priceless concurs, both high and low class persons with tremendous jubilation, and exceptional solemnities from August 31st to September 7th Anno MDCCLX celebrated , Freising 1761. ( full text in Google book search)
  • Ludwig Heilmaier: The Church of St. Zeno in Isen . Self-published, Munich 1920.
  • Ludwig Heilmaier: The upper Isental and the Isen monastery . Self-published, Evenhausen 1938.
  • Isen Monastery as a place of worship for which the sacramentary was written , in: Alban Doid, Leo Eizenhöfer (eds.), Das Prager Sakramentar , Beuron 1949, Volume II, pp. 37–43.
  • Ludwig Höhenberger u. a .: Isen - 550 years of the market. Chronicle of the origin and development of our homeland . Nussrainer, Isen 1984.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Joachim Jahn : Ducatus Baiuvariorum: The Bavarian Duchy of Agilolfinger , S. 214. (= monographs on the history of the Middle Ages). Hiersemann, Stuttgart 1991. ISBN 3-7772-9108-0 .
  2. Michael Hartig: Die Oberbayerischen Stifts , Volume II: The Premonstratensian Monasteries, the Altomünster and Altenhohenau Monasteries, the Collegiate Monasteries, the Order of German and the Order of Malta, the post-medieval wealthy medals and pens . Publisher vorm. G. J. Manz, Munich 1935, DNB 560552157 , p. 68.

Coordinates: 48 ° 12 '43.9 "  N , 12 ° 3' 28.1"  E