St. Veit (Freising)

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St. Vitus with Loreto (left) and Marienkapelle (right)
View from " Weihenstephaner Berg" to Freising, 2007

St. Veit is a former secular canon monastery and former monastery of the Benedictines in the diocese of Freising in Freising in Bavaria .

history

In 724, St. Korbinian , founder of the Diocese of Freising, built his first monastery cell on a hill (today "Lindenkeller") in the very east of the Weihenstephaner Berg - between the Domberg and the Weihenstephan Monastery on the " Weihenstephaner Berg" .

Around the year 833, a Benedictine monastery consecrated to St. Vitus was founded here by the Bishop of Freising, Hitto von Freising .

Around 1020, the Bishop of Freising, Egilbert von Moosburg, converted the monastery into a secular canon monastery . Until secularization, St. Veit was one of the three Freising parishes (church located outside the city - west of the St. Vitus Gate), next to St. Andreas on the Domberg and St. Georg in the middle of the city.

The collegiate church of St. Veit was a three-aisled Romanesque church, redesigned in Baroque style in the 17th century, and finally in 1765 the main altar with painting by Johann Baptist Deyrer (disappeared).

In 1564 the dean Michael Grasser represented all Bavarian collegiate monasteries at the provincial synod in Salzburg. In St. Veit, the composer and Freising court conductor Placidus von Camerloher became canon in 1748.

In the course of secularization in Bavaria , St. Veit was also dissolved in 1802; The church and the three chapels were closed, all buildings demolished in 1803, the parish incorporated into the parish of St. George .

In 1825 the "Lindenkeller" inn , which still exists today, was built here. To the west of it, next to the footpath to Weihenstephan, there is another historical boundary stone ( Hochstift Freising : Electorate of Bavaria).

Row of provosts

source

  • Arnold, 1062, 1092
  • Heinrich, 1129
  • Burchard, 1143
  • Hartmod, 1156
  • Rahewin, 1158, 1169
  • Conrad Felixpuer, 1177, 1198
  • Eberhard, 1207
  • Heinrich, 1212, 1217
  • Ortwin, 1217, 1225
  • Udalschalk von Greifenberg, 1228, 1237
  • Peter, 1245, 1256
  • Heinrich von Hundpiß, 1259, 1276
  • Eberhard Koellner, 1276, 1296
  • Heinrich Freiherr von Weilheim, 1300, 1313
  • Conrad von Tor, 1315
  • Eberhard von Pullenhausen, 1315, 1320
  • Conrad von Tor (2nd term), 1324, † 1338
  • Ulrich von Massenhausen, 1339, 1352
  • Albert von Sigenheim, † 1352
  • Ludwig von Pienzenau, 1353, † 1361
  • Albert von Sichenhausen, 1365
  • Peter von Fraunberg, 1379, 1380
  • Georg von Fraunberg, 1380
  • Nicolaus Menzinger, 1381, † 1400
  • Heinrich Judmann, 1400, † 1426
  • Johann Tulbeck , 1428-1453
  • Burkard von Freyberg, 1453–1479
  • Heinrich von Schmiechen, 1480–1483
  • Marcus Hörnlein, 1483–1491
  • Andreas Zirnberger, 1491–1507
  • Vitus Meller, 1508-1517
  • Jakob Meller, 1517–1536
  • Leo Loesch, 1538–1552
  • Georg Stengel, 1552
  • Hieronymus Busilidius, resigned 1558
  • Cardinal Otto von Augsburg , 1558–1568
  • Cornelius Honlang von Rosental, 1568–1571
  • Christian Keller, 1571–1607
  • Christoph von Rehlingen, 1607–1632
  • Johann Georg von Rehlingen, 1632–1665
  • Paris Julius von Salm, 1665–1678
  • Andreas Lenzer, 1679–1698
  • Max von Freyberg, 1699–1733
  • Josef Alois Freiherr von Edelweck, 1737–1770
  • Josef D. Count of Taufkirchen, 1770
  • Franz Korbinian Count von Koenigsfeld, 1770–1772
  • Anton Graf von Breuner , 1772–1779
  • Josef Carl Graf von Lerchenfeld, 1779–1802

Web links

Commons : St. Veit  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. 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. 48 f.

Coordinates: 48 ° 23 ′ 51.6 "  N , 11 ° 44 ′ 16.1"  E