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Keywords

lunatic asylum
The Name of the Rose
Prince of Nassau-Usingen
Eberbach Abbey
Bernard of Clairvaux
Umberto Eco
Kloster Eberbach
Hesse
Hessen
Germany
cloister
Le Nom de la rose


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Kloster Eberbach / Eberbach Abbey

Kloster Eberbach / Eberbach Abbey
Kloster Eberbach was founded in 1136 by Bernard of Clairvaux as the first Cistercian monastery on the east bank of the Rhine. A small Benedictian monastery had been here before, but after the Cistercian "relaunch", the abbey really thrived, becoming one of the largest and economically most sucessful in Germany. During the 12th/13th century about 100 monks plus 200 lay brothers lived here. Already in 1211, Kloster Eberbach possessed more than 200 settlements, all quoted in the "Oculus Memoriae", an "inventory list".

Despite some setbacks due to wars, the monastery continued very sucessfully upto the time of the French Revolution, when the decline started. Politics changed dramatically during the time of secularisation. In 1803 the abbey was dissolved, the remaining monks were forced to leave. The complex with all assets came into the ownership of the last Prince of Nassau-Usingen. From 1866 on, it was owned by Prussia, later Hesse. The buildings were used as a prison and as a lunatic asylum during that time.

Meanwhile the management of the vast vineyards and wine production has continued in state hands. Great white wines are produced here! The buildings now are owned by a charitable foundation, aiming to maintain the important complex.

The oldest parts of the cloister were probably erected together with the abbey church 1150/1200 in Romanesque style. The younger ones in Gothic style. After the secularisation some parts of it got demolished.

Most interiors of the film "The Name of the Rose", based on Umberto Eco´s novel, where shot in Kloster Eberbach.


kloster-eberbach.de/

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