Ortisei (Habach)
St. Ulrich is a former collegiate monastery and today's Catholic parish church in Habach in Bavaria in the diocese of Augsburg .
history
The monastery consecrated to St. Ulrich was founded by Count Norbert von Hohenwart in the 11th century as a canon monastery , but there was no clear assignment to the Augustinian rule . On April 23, 1330, Emperor Ludwig the Bavarian granted Habach and 16 other Upper Bavarian monasteries and monasteries the right to court marches . From 1560 the Bavarian dukes had the right to appoint the provosts of Habach. In 1663 the construction of the new Ulrichskirche was started on the ruins of a previous church - consecrated in 1073 -. On October 14, 1668, the collegiate church was inaugurated by the Augsburg auxiliary bishop Kaspar Zeiler . On July 17, 1704, the western part of the church, the sacristy and the steeple were destroyed by flames. The monastery and the Hofmark were dissolved on August 6, 1802 in the course of secularization . The collegiate church became a parish church .
The church is entered in the list of monuments. The high altar was created by the Weilheim sculptor Ambros Dengler. The high altar picture, painted by Simon Bernhard from Murnau, shows the church patron pleading for help from the Blessed Mother in the battle of the Lechfeld in 955. Next to the extract are the figures of the diocese patroness Afra and her mother Hilaria. The canons had six side altars made for the richly decorated high altar. Rich ceiling stucco, the pulpit and the elegant furnishings express the great importance of the church.
Row of provosts
Very sketchy
- Berthold
- Hildbert, 1130
- Berthold von Wilzhofen, 1292
- Gerung von Wasserburg, 1312
- Johann Witzgeförch, 1402
- Berthold Truchseß von Küllenthal, 1404
- Johann Vogel
- Philipp Doberin
- Stephan Rosin
- Diepold von Freyberg, 1446–1449
- Leonhard Gessel , 1452–1465
- Wolfgang von Seyboldsdorf
- Hieronymus Stengel
- Johann Stengel
- Peter Buechler, 1480
- Wendelin Schicker, 1503–1511
- Ulrich Riederer von Barr, 1511
- Conrad Hofer, 1560
- Gabriel Lafenthaler, 1592
- Matthäus Althamer, 1595
- Albert Hunger, 1602
- Heinrich Anslaeus, 1633
- Johann Heinrich von Rohrbach, 1643
- Johann Franz von der March, 1661
- Johann Joachim Hörwarth, 1663
- Johann Keller, 1663–1679
- Ferdinand Max Ernst Graf von Berlo, 1679–1697; later Bishop of Namur
- Johann Martin Constante von Festenburg, 1698–1719
- Anton Cajetan von Unertl, 1719–1753
- Johann Josef Anton von Hertel, 1756–1769
- Carl Anton Ignaz von Vacchieri, 1769–1781
- Franz Josef Freiherr von Oberndorf, 1781–1789
- Ignaz Frank, 1789-1792
- Cajetan Franz Freiherr von Reisach, 1792–1803
literature
- Georg Paula , Stefanie Berg-Hobohm : District Weilheim-Schongau (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume I.23 ). Lipp, Munich 2003, ISBN 3-87490-585-3 .
Web links
- St. Ulrich (Habach) , basic data in the database of monasteries in Bavaria in the House of Bavarian History
- Twelve bells of the Bavarian Broadcasting Corporation from November 1st, 2018 from the parish church of St. Ulrich in Habach
- The Habach Monastery from 1083 to 1802
Individual evidence
- ^ Diocese of Augsburg
- ↑ 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. 71.
Coordinates: 47 ° 43 ′ 40.8 " N , 11 ° 16 ′ 44.8" E