Kloster Gröningen - St. Vitus
Kloster Gröningen - St. Vitus
Quedlinburg - St. Servatius
Soria - Monasterio de San Juan de Duero
Soria - Monasterio de San Juan de Duero
Soria - Monasterio de San Juan de Duero
Soria - Monasterio de San Juan de Duero
Soria - Monasterio de San Juan de Duero
Soria - Monasterio de San Juan de Duero
Soria - Concatedral de San Pedro
Soria - Concatedral de San Pedro
Soria - Concatedral de San Pedro
Soria - Concatedral de San Pedro
Soria - Concatedral de San Pedro
Almazán - San Miguel
Santo Domingo de Silos - Monasterio de Santo Domin…
Santo Domingo de Silos - Monasterio de Santo Domin…
Santo Domingo de Silos - Monasterio de Santo Domin…
Santo Domingo de Silos - Monasterio de Santo Domin…
Santo Domingo de Silos - Monasterio de Santo Domin…
Santo Domingo de Silos - Monasterio de Santo Domin…
Frómista - San Martín
Frómista - San Martín
Frómista - San Martín
Frómista - San Martín
Frómista - San Martín
Frómista - San Martín
Frómista - San Martín
Frómista - San Martín
Frómista - San Martín
León - Basílica de San Isidoro
León - Basílica de San Isidoro
León - Basílica de San Isidoro
Ermsleben - Konradsburg / St. Sixtus
Schloss Leitzkau / Sancta Maria in Monte
Jerichow - Kloster Jerichow
Jerichow - Kloster Jerichow
Jerichow - Kloster Jerichow
Jerichow - Kloster Jerichow
Luxeuil les Bains - St. Pierre
Payerne - Notre Dame
Payerne - Notre Dame
Payerne - Notre Dame
Payerne - Notre Dame
Payerne - Notre Dame
Payerne - Notre Dame
Payerne - Notre Dame
Pommevic - Saint-Denis
Tarbes - Jardin Massey
Tarbes - Jardin Massey
Tarbes - Jardin Massey
Tarbes - Jardin Massey
Tarbes - Jardin Massey
Ripoll - Monastery of Santa Maria
Ripoll - Monastery of Santa Maria
Ripoll - Monastery of Santa Maria
Ripoll - Monastery of Santa Maria
Ripoll - Monastery of Santa Maria
Ripoll - Monastery of Santa Maria
Berlin from Victory column
Piacenza - Duomo
Roman Capital in the Public Garden of Vienne, Octo…
Roman Capital in the Public Garden of Vienne, Octo…
Capital with a Head in the Lugdunum Gallo-Roman Mu…
Capital with a Head in the Lugdunum Gallo-Roman Mu…
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Hadmersleben - St. Peter und St. Paul
Kloster Hadmersleben (Hadmersleben monastery) was founded in 961 by the (six-year-old) King Otto II. There was quite a row because Bishop Bernhard von Halberstadt had refused to cede Magdeburg to Otto I as an archbishopric, even though the Pope wanted it. The bishop's refusal led to his nickname "Eisenkopf" (ironhead). The nunnery was not a really great success, and so the then bishop of Halberstadt wrote in 1120: "The piety of the nuns of Hadmersleben has not only fallen asleep but has completely died out." Thanks to a capable abbess, the convent soon became successful and in 1160 the building of the chapter house began. Around 1320 the construction of the Gothic monastery church began.
But then the convent fell into disrepair again until the nuns joined the Bursfeld congregation. Hadmersleben Abbey is one of the few monasteries in the Archdiocese of Magdeburg that remained Catholic beyond the Reformation and the Thirty Years' War. The Peace of Westphalia of 1648 made this possible.
In 1809, by decree of the King of Westphalia Jérôme Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon, the dissolution of the monastery was ordered. However, the affiliated parish remained.
St. Peter and St. Paul was the monastery church and has been a parish church since the Reformation. Since the 10th century, three construction phases can be identified. This is the oldest part of the church, today the basement of the baroque nuns' choir, with its Ottonian capitals..
But then the convent fell into disrepair again until the nuns joined the Bursfeld congregation. Hadmersleben Abbey is one of the few monasteries in the Archdiocese of Magdeburg that remained Catholic beyond the Reformation and the Thirty Years' War. The Peace of Westphalia of 1648 made this possible.
In 1809, by decree of the King of Westphalia Jérôme Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon, the dissolution of the monastery was ordered. However, the affiliated parish remained.
St. Peter and St. Paul was the monastery church and has been a parish church since the Reformation. Since the 10th century, three construction phases can be identified. This is the oldest part of the church, today the basement of the baroque nuns' choir, with its Ottonian capitals..
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