PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Michaelsberg Abbey, Siegburg
rdfs:comment
  • The hill called the Michaelsberg, formerly known as the Siegberg, was first inhabited about 800 by the Counts of Auelgau who built a castle there. In 1064 Archbishop Anno II of Cologne founded a Benedictine monastery there, dedicated to the Archangel Michael, from whom both the mountain and the abbey thenceforward took their names. The monastery quickly became a reformed abbey in the Cluniac Reforms. After the death of Archbishop Anno in 1075 he was buried in the abbey. After he was canonised, in 1183 his bones were translated to the "Anno shrine", which can still be seen in the abbey church.
owl:sameAs
Era
  • Middle Ages
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:religion/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
event pre
  • Founded
year start
  • 1512
conventional long name
  • Imperial Abbey of Michaelsberg, Siegburg
date pre
  • 1064
Status
  • Abbey
Country
  • Germany
image s
  • 20
event end
  • Lost Reichsfreiheit to Berg
Region
  • Central Europe
S
  • Duchy of Berg
Continent
  • Europe
year end
  • 1676
event start
  • Gained Reichsfreiheit
government type
  • Theocracy
image p
  • 20
native name
  • Reichsabtei Michaelsberg in Siegburg
image coat
  • Wappen Siegburg.png
Empire
  • Holy Roman Empire
P
  • Duchy of Berg
Capital
  • Siegburg
Common name
  • Michaelsberg Abbey
abstract
  • The hill called the Michaelsberg, formerly known as the Siegberg, was first inhabited about 800 by the Counts of Auelgau who built a castle there. In 1064 Archbishop Anno II of Cologne founded a Benedictine monastery there, dedicated to the Archangel Michael, from whom both the mountain and the abbey thenceforward took their names. The monastery quickly became a reformed abbey in the Cluniac Reforms. After the death of Archbishop Anno in 1075 he was buried in the abbey. After he was canonised, in 1183 his bones were translated to the "Anno shrine", which can still be seen in the abbey church. In 1512, after a long legal battle, the abbey was recognised as reichsunmittelbar (that is, directly subject to the Emperor and to no other territorial authority). This led to bitter rivalry, and on occasion even war, with the town of Siegburg. In 1676 the abbey again became subject to the local territorial power. The abbey was dissolved during the secularisation of 1802–03. Until their resettlement by the Cistercians on 2 July 1914, the buildings were used for varied purposes, for some time as a barracks, but also at other times as a lunatic asylum and a slaughterhouse. In 1941 the abbey was again dissolved, this time by the SS; the monks were expelled and the buildings commandeered. The buildings were almost completely destroyed by a bombing raid in 1944, although they were in use as military hospital and flying the flag of the Red Cross. In 1945 the monks expelled four years previously were finally able to return, some from captivity as prisoners of war, others from exile. They had to rebuild the monastery virtually from scratch. As of 2005, the community of Michaelsberg Abbey consisted of 13 members and one novice. In the north wing and also in a large part of the west wing the Edith Stein Retreat House of the Diocese of Cologne has been accommodated since 1997.