Burtscheid Abbey Explained

Native Name:Abtei Burtscheid
Conventional Long Name:Imperial Abbey of Burtscheid
Common Name:Burtscheid Abbey
Era:Middle Ages
Status:Imperial Abbey
Empire:Holy Roman Empire
Government Type:Theocracy
Today:Germany
Year Start:1138
Year End:1802
Event Pre:Founded by Benedictines
Date Pre:997
Event Start:Made Reichsfrei
Event1:Taken over by Cistercians,
immediacy confirmed
Date Event1:
1220
Event2:Purchased its own Vogtei
Date Event2:1649
Event3:Established gambling house
Date Event3:1779
Event4:Occupied by France
Date Event4:1792, 1794–1804
Event End:Secularised to France
Event Post:Awarded to Prussia
Date Post:1815
S1:Roer (department)
Flag S1:Flag of France.svg
Capital:Burtscheid Abbey
Common Languages:Moselle Franconian
Image Map Caption:Burtscheid Abbey church

Burtscheid Abbey (German: Abtei Burtscheid) was a Benedictine monastery, after 1220 a Cistercian nunnery, located at Burtscheid, near Aachen, North Rhine-Westphalia, in Germany.

History

The abbey was founded in 997 under Emperor Otto III. The first abbot, Gregor, who came to Burtscheid from Calabria, is sometimes said to have been the brother of Theophanu, Byzantine mother of the Emperor. He was buried beneath the altar after his death in 999, and his date of death, 4 November, was kept as a feast day until the dissolution of the abbey.

In 1018 the Emperor Henry II endowed it with the surrounding territory. Also at about this time the monastery was raised to the status of an abbey, and the dedication was changed from Saints Nicholas and Apollinaris to Saints John the Baptist and Nicholas.

In 1138, the abbey was made reichsfrei by Conrad III, being granted Imperial immediacy, the privilege of being subject only to the Holy Roman Emperor, rather than to an intermediate lord. The abbey was under the Vogtei (loosely "protectorship") of the Barony of Mérode until the abbey purchased its Vogtei from them, in 1649.

In 1220, under Emperor Frederick II and his chancellor, Archbishop Engelbert of Cologne, the Benedictines were evicted and replaced by Cistercian nuns who had previously been living at the Salvatorberg in Aachen, to whom the abbey's possessions were transferred. At the same time the abbey's reichsfreiheit was confirmed.

The abbey church was rebuilt in the mid-14th century, and again between 1735 and 1754 by the architect J.J. Couven.

In 1779, despite the refusal of permission by the council of Aachen, who by that time were responsible for local government in Burtscheid, the then abbess introduced a gambling house, and the street is still known today as Krugenofen Kasinostrasse.

Burtscheid was occupied by French troops in December 1792, and from September 1794 until 1804. They used the abbey church for the manufacture of balloons. In August 1802 the nunnery was secularised and dissolved.

The remaining abbey buildings are now used by a school and for residential and administrative purposes.

Further reading

External links

50.7631°N 6.0933°W