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Abbey of Saint Gall

The Abbey of Saint Gall (German: Abtei St. Gallen) is a dissolved abbey (747–1805) in a Catholic religious complex in the city of St. Gallen in Switzerland. The Carolingian-era monastery existed from 719, founded by Saint Othmar on the spot where Saint Gall had erected his hermitage. It became an independent principality between 9th and 13th centuries, and was for many centuries one of the chief Benedictine abbeys in Europe. The library of the Abbey is one of the oldest monastic libraries in the world.[2] The city of St. Gallen originated as an adjoining settlement of the abbey. The abbey was secularized around 1800, and in 1848 its former church became a Cathedral. Since 1983 the abbey precinct has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Cathedral of St Gall
The Cathedral of Saint Gall
Kathedrale St. Gallen
47°25′23″N 9°22′38″E / 47.42306°N 9.37722°E / 47.42306; 9.37722
LocationSt. Gallen
CountrySwitzerland
DenominationCatholic
WebsiteWebsite of the Cathedral
History
StatusActive
Founded8th century
Architecture
Functional statusCathedral
Heritage designationUNESCO World Heritage Site
StyleBaroque
Specifications
Number of domes1
Number of spires2
Spire height68 m (223 ft)[1]
Administration
DioceseRoman Catholic Diocese of Saint Gallen
Clergy
Bishop(s)Markus Büchel
CriteriaCultural: ii, iv
Reference268
Inscription1983 (7th Session)
Hot air balloon shaped as the Abbey of Saint Gall

History Edit

Foundation Edit

Around 612 Gallus, according to tradition an Irish monk and disciple and companion of Saint Columbanus, established a hermitage on the site that would become the monastery. He lived in his cell until his death in 646, and was buried there[3] in Arbon (Canton of Thurgau).[4] Afterwards, the people venerated him as a saint and prayed at his tomb for his intercession in times of danger.[4]

Following Gallus' death, his disciples remained living together in his cell and followed the rule of St. Columban, which combined prayer, work of the hands, reading, and teaching.[5] They aided and taught virtue to the many pilgrims who came to St. Gall's tomb.[5] St. Magnus was the first successor of St. Gallen, but he soon left on a mission to Allgäu, Swabia.[5] His successors were the deacon Stephen and the priest Magulfe, under whom the news of St. Gallen's miracles spread throughout most of Germany.[5]

Several different dates are given for the foundation of the monastery, including 719,[4] 720,[6] 747[7] and the middle of the 8th century.[8] A gentleman and judge of Thurgau, Waltraf (possibly, Waltram or Gaudran), in order to use the alms and collections that were being given at St. Gall's tomb to found a more regular monastery, attracted a local Alemannic pastor Otmar.[5] Waltraf went to see Charles Martel, gave him the property of the hermitage, and asked him to give the administration of it to Otmar.[5] Charles agreed and sent Otmar the finances to build a monastery. After the death of Charles Martel, his son Pepin continued to support them. On the recommendation of his brother Carloman, who had visited this monastery on his way to Italy, Pepin gave the monastery privileges, letters of protection, and an assured income. Pepin placed the rule of St. Benedict in the hands of St. Otmar (to be substituted for that of St. Columban).[5]

Otmar (or Othmar) is named as the founder and the first abbot of the Abbey of St. Gall.[9] During his abbacy the St. Gall School was founded.[9] Otmar extended St. Gall's original hermit cell and adopted the Carolingian style for his building projects. The abbey grew quickly; many Alemannic noblemen entered to become monks and arts, letters and sciences flourished. The register of monastic professions, at the end of abbot Otmar's rule makes mentions of 53 names. Two monks of the Abbey of St Gall, Magnus of Füssen and Theodor, founded the monasteries in Kempten and Füssen in the Allgäu. With the growth in the number of monks the abbey also grew economically stronger. Much land in Thurgau, Zürichgau and in the rest of Alemannia as far as the Neckar was donated to the abbey by means of Stiftungen.[4] Under abbot Waldo of Reichenau (740–814) copying of manuscripts was undertaken and a famous library was gathered. Numerous Anglo-Saxon and Irish monks came to copy manuscripts. At Charlemagne's request Pope Adrian I sent distinguished cantors from Rome, who instructed the monks in the use of the Gregorian chant. In 744, the Alemannic nobleman Beata sold several properties to the abbey in order to finance his journey to Rome.[10]

Golden Age Edit

In the subsequent century, St. Gall came into conflict with the nearby Bishopric of Constance which had recently acquired jurisdiction over the Abbey of Reichenau on Lake Constance. It was not until Emperor Louis the Pious (ruled 814–840) confirmed in 813 the imperial immediacy (Reichsunmittelbarkeit) of the abbey, that this conflict ceased.[3] The abbey became an Imperial Abbey (Reichsabtei). King Louis the German confirmed in 833 the immunity of the abbey and allowed the monks the free choice of their abbot.[10] In 854 finally, the Abbey of St Gall reached its full autonomy by King Louis the German releasing the abbey from the obligation to pay tithes to the Bishop of Constance.

From this time until the 10th century, the abbey flourished. It was home to several famous scholars, including Notker of Liège, Notker the Stammerer, Notker Labeo, Tuotilo and Hartker (who developed the antiphonal liturgical books for the abbey). During the 9th century a new, larger church was built and the library was expanded. Manuscripts on a wide variety of topics were purchased by the abbey and copies were made. Over 400 manuscripts from this time have survived and are still in the library today.[3]

Silver Age Edit

Between 924 and 933 the Magyars threatened the abbey and the books had to be removed to Reichenau for safety. Not all the books were returned.

On 26 April 937 a fire broke out and destroyed much of the abbey and the adjoining settlement, though the library was undamaged.[10] About 954 they started to protect the monastery and buildings by a surrounding wall.[8] Around 971/974 abbot Notker (about whom almost nothing is known; nephew of Notker Physicus) finalized the walling and the adjoining settlements started to become the town of St Gall.[10] In 1006, the abbey was the northernmost place where a sighting of the 1006 supernova was recorded.

The death of abbot Ulrich II on 9 December 1076 terminated the cultural silver age of the monastery.[10]

Under the Prince-Abbots Edit

Princely Abbey of Saint Gall
Fürstabtei St. Gallen
1207–1798
 
Coat of arms
StatusImperial Abbey
CapitalSt. Gallen
Common languagesHigh Alemannic
GovernmentPrincipality
Historical eraMiddle Ages, Renaissance, Baroque
• Monastery founded
719
• Became a Princely Abbey
1207
August 17, 1451
• Pillaged by the Old Swiss Confederacy
1712
 
1798
• Helvetic Republic collapsed; city and abbey became part of the newly founded canton of St. Gallen
 


1803
Preceded by
Succeeded by
 
The territories of the Abbey of St. Gall from the mid-15th century to 1798

In 1207, abbot Ulrich von Sax becomes a Prince (Reichsfürst, or simply Fürst) of the Holy Roman Empire by King Philip of Germany. The abbey became a Princely Abbey (Reichsabtei). As the abbey became more involved in local politics, it entered a period of decline.[3] The city of St. Gallen proper progressively freed itself from the rule of the abbot, acquiring Imperial immediacy, and by the late 15th century was recognized as a Free imperial city.[11] By about 1353 the guilds, headed by the cloth-weavers guild, gained control of the civic government. In 1415 the city bought its liberty from the German king King Sigismund.[8] During the 14th century Humanists[3] were allowed to carry off some of the rare texts from the abbey library.

In the late 14th and early 15th centuries, the farmers of the abbot's personal estates (known as Appenzell, from Latin: abbatis cella meaning "cell (i.e. estate) of the abbot") began seeking independence. In 1401, the first of the Appenzell Wars broke out, and following the Appenzell victory at Stoss in 1405 they became allies of the Swiss Confederation in 1411. During the Appenzell Wars, the town of St. Gallen often sided with Appenzell against the abbey. So when Appenzell allied with the Swiss, the town of St. Gallen followed just a few months later.[8] The abbot became an ally of several members of the Swiss Confederation (Zürich, Lucerne, Schwyz and Glarus) in 1451. While Appenzell and St. Gallen became full members of the Swiss Confederation in 1454. Then, in 1457 the town of St. Gallen became officially free from the abbot.[8]

In 1468 the abbot, Ulrich Rösch, bought the County of Toggenburg from the representatives of its counts, after the family died out in 1436. In 1487 he built a monastery at Rorschach on Lake Constance, to which he planned to move. However, he encountered stiff resistance from the St. Gallen citizenry, other clerics, and the Appenzell nobility in the Rhine Valley who were concerned about their holdings. The town of St. Gallen wanted to restrict the increase of power in the abbey and simultaneously increase the power of the town. The mayor of St. Gallen, Ulrich Varnbüler, established contact with farmers and Appenzell residents (led by the fanatical Hermann Schwendiner) who were seeking an opportunity to weaken the abbot. Initially, he protested to the abbot and the representatives of the four sponsoring Confederate cantons (Zürich, Lucerne, Schwyz, and Glarus) against the construction of the new abbey in Rorschach. Then on July 28, 1489, he had armed troops from St. Gallen and Appenzell destroy the buildings already under construction.[8] When the abbot complained to the Confederates about the damages and demanded full compensation, Varnbüler responded with a counter suit and in cooperation with Schwendiner rejected the arbitration efforts of the non-partisan Confederates. He motivated the clerics from Wil to Rorschach to discard their loyalty to the abbey and spoke against the abbey at the town meeting at Waldkirch, where the popular league was formed. He was confident that the four sponsoring cantons would not intervene with force, due to the prevailing tensions between the Confederation and the Swabian League. He was strengthened in his resolve by the fact that the people of St. Gallen elected him again to the highest magistrate in 1490.

An associate of the Swiss Confederation Edit

However, in early 1490 the four cantons decided to carry out their duty to the abbey and to invade the St. Gallen canton with an armed force. The people of Appenzell and the local clerics submitted to this force without noteworthy resistance, while the city of St. Gallen braced for a fight to the finish. However, when they learned that their compatriots had given up the fight, they lost confidence; the result was that they concluded a peace pact that greatly restricted the city's powers and burdened the city with serious penalties and reparations payments. Varnbüler and Schwendiner fled to the court of King Maximilian and lost all their property in St. Gallen and Appenzell. However, the abbot's reliance on the Swiss to support him reduced his position almost to that of a "subject district".[8]

The town adopted the Reformation in 1524, while the abbey remained Catholic, which damaged relations between the town and abbey. Both the abbot and a representative of the town were admitted to the Swiss Tagsatzung or Diet as the closest associates of the Confederation.[8]

In the 16th century the abbey was raided by Calvinist groups, which scattered many of the old books.[3] In 1530, abbot Diethelm began a restoration that stopped the decline and led to an expansion of the schools and library.

 
The interior of the cathedral is one of the most important baroque monuments in Switzerland

Under abbot Pius Reher (1630–54) a printing press was started. In 1712 during the Toggenburg war, also called the second war of Villmergen, the Abbey of St. Gall was pillaged by the Swiss. They took most of the books and manuscripts to Zürich and Bern. For security, the abbey was forced to request the protection of the townspeople of St. Gallen. Until 1457 the townspeople had been serfs of the abbey, but they had grown in power until they were protecting the abbey.

End of the Prince-Abbots Edit

Following the disturbances, the abbey was still the largest religious city-state in Switzerland, with over 77,000 inhabitants.[12] A final attempt to expand the abbey resulted in the demolition of most of the medieval monastery. The new structures, including the cathedral by architect Peter Thumb (1681–1766),[13] were designed in the late Baroque style and constructed between 1755 and 1768. The large and ornate new abbey did not remain a monastery for very long. In 1798 the Prince-Abbot's secular power was suppressed, and the abbey was secularized. The monks were driven out and moved into other abbeys. The abbey became a separate See in 1846, with the abbey church as its cathedral and a portion of the monastic buildings for the bishop.

Cultural treasures Edit

 
The Plan of St Gall, the only surviving major architectural drawing from the Early Middle Ages
 
The diagram version of the Plan

The Abbey library of Saint Gall is recognized as one of the richest medieval libraries in the world. It is home to one of the most comprehensive collections of early medieval books in the German-speaking part of Europe. As of 2005, the library consists of over 160,000 books, of which 2100 are handwritten. Nearly half of the handwritten books are from the Middle Ages and 400 are over 1000 years old.[2] Lately the Stiftsbibliothek has launched a project for the digitisation of the priceless manuscript collection, which currently (December 2009) contains 355[2] documents that are available on the Codices Electronici Sangallenses webpage.

The library interior is exquisitely realised in the Rococo style with carved polished wood, stucco and paint used to achieve its overall effect. It was designed by the architect Peter Thumb and is open to the public. In addition it holds exhibitions as well as concerts and other events.[14]

One of the more interesting documents in the Stiftsbibliothek is a copy of Priscian's Institutiones grammaticae which contains the poem Is acher in gaíth in-nocht... written in Old Irish.

The library also preserves a unique 9th-century document, known as the Plan of St. Gall, the only surviving major architectural drawing from the roughly 700-year period between the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the 13th century. The Plan drawn was never actually built, and was so named because it was kept at the famous medieval monastery library, where it remains to this day. The plan was an ideal of what a well-designed and well-supplied monastery should have, as envisioned by one of the synods held at Aachen for the reform of monasticism in the Frankish empire during the early years of emperor Louis the Pious (between 814 and 817).

A late 9th-century drawing of Paul lecturing an agitated crowd of Jews and gentiles, part of a copy of a Pauline epistles produced at and still held by the monastery, was included in a medieval-drawing show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York the summer of 2009. A reviewer noted that the artist had "a special talent for depicting hair, ... with the saint's beard ending in curling droplets of ink."[15]

St. Gall is noted for its early use of the neume, the basic element of Western and Eastern systems of musical notation prior to the invention of five-line staff notation. The earliest extant manuscripts are from the 9th or 10th century.

In 1983, the Convent of St. Gall was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List as "a perfect example of a great Carolingian monastery".[16]

People of the abbey Edit

List of abbots Edit

There were a total of 73 ruling abbots (including six anti-abbots) between 719 and 1805. A complete collection of abbots' biographies was published by Henggeler (1929). A table of abbots' names complete with their coats of arms was printed by Beat Jakob Anton Hiltensperger in 1778.[17]

Nuns Edit

  • Wiborada (died 926). First woman formally canonized by the Catholic Church.

See also Edit

Notes and references Edit

  • Walter William Horn's Papers Regarding The Plan of St. Gall : production materials, 1967–1979 are housed in the at Stanford University Libraries
  1. ^ "Federal Office of Culture". Retrieved June 15, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 2017-07-02. Retrieved 2008-04-23.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Alston, Cyprian (1909). "Abbey of St. Gall" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 6. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  4. ^ a b c d Saint Gall (Princely Abbey) in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Butler, Alban (1808). Vies des pères, des martyrs, et des autres principaux saints : tirées des actes originaux et des monumens les plus authentiques, avec des notes historiques et critiques. Chez Broulhiet, éditeur, rue Saint-Rome. pp. 261–65. OCLC 71811056.
  6. ^ "Sankt Gallen". Encyclopædia Britannica online. Retrieved 2015-01-25.
  7. ^ . World Heritage List. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, UNESCO. 1983. Archived from the original on 2017-05-09. Retrieved 2015-01-26.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Coolidge, William Augustus Brevoort (1911). "St Gall" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 4.
  9. ^ a b De Rijk, L.M. (1963). "On the Curri cul um of the Arts of the Trivium at St. Gall from c. 850-c. 1000". Vivarium. 1 (1): 35–86. doi:10.1163/156853463x00036. ISSN 0042-7543.
  10. ^ a b c d e [History chronology about the Abbey of St Gall] (PDF) (in German). Staatskanzlei St. Gallen. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2015-01-25.
  11. ^ St. Gallen in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  12. ^ Religious/Secular Land Holders in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  13. ^ Hempel, Eberhard. 1965. Baroque art and architecture in central Europe: Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Poland. Painting and sculpture: seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; architecture: sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. Baltimore: Penguin Books, p. 163.
  14. ^ St. Gall Library website (limited English information) (in German) July 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Those Medieval Monks Could Draw" Review by Roberta Smith, The New York Times, June 18, 2009 (6/19/09, p. C25 of the NY ed.). Retrieved 6/19/09. "Pen and Parchment: Drawing in the Middle Ages" runs through August 23, 2009.
  16. ^ UNESCO website 2017-05-09 at the Wayback Machine accessed 30 December 2009
  17. ^ Henggeler, P. Rudolf, Professbuch der fürstl. Benediktinerabtei der Heiligen Gallus und Otmar zu St.Gallen, Monasticon-Benedictinum Helvetiae 1, Einsiedeln (1929). History of the Abbey 2012-06-04 at the Wayback Machine (in German). See also Herzog, Johann Jakob (1860). The Protestant theological and ecclesiastical encyclopedia, Volume 2. Lindsay & Blakiston. pp. 351–353.; Schaff, Phillip (1910). The new Schaff-Herzog encyclopedia of religious knowledge. Funk and Wagnalls Company. pp. 196, 283..

External links Edit

  • Stiftsbibliothek Sankt Gallen
  • Codices Electronici Sangallenses 2016-11-09 at the Wayback Machine—project for the digitisation of the medieval manuscripts at Sankt Gallen
  • E-codices, Virtual Manuscript Library of Switzerland
  • St Gall Plan - presents a digitised version of the St Gall Plan, and zoomable reproductions of Carolingian manuscripts from St Gall.

Further reading Edit

abbey, saint, gall, german, abtei, gallen, dissolved, abbey, 1805, catholic, religious, complex, city, gallen, switzerland, carolingian, monastery, existed, from, founded, saint, othmar, spot, where, saint, gall, erected, hermitage, became, independent, princi. The Abbey of Saint Gall German Abtei St Gallen is a dissolved abbey 747 1805 in a Catholic religious complex in the city of St Gallen in Switzerland The Carolingian era monastery existed from 719 founded by Saint Othmar on the spot where Saint Gall had erected his hermitage It became an independent principality between 9th and 13th centuries and was for many centuries one of the chief Benedictine abbeys in Europe The library of the Abbey is one of the oldest monastic libraries in the world 2 The city of St Gallen originated as an adjoining settlement of the abbey The abbey was secularized around 1800 and in 1848 its former church became a Cathedral Since 1983 the abbey precinct has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site Cathedral of St GallThe Cathedral of Saint GallKathedrale St GallenAbbey Cathedral of St Gall47 25 23 N 9 22 38 E 47 42306 N 9 37722 E 47 42306 9 37722LocationSt GallenCountrySwitzerlandDenominationCatholicWebsiteWebsite of the CathedralHistoryStatusActiveFounded8th centuryArchitectureFunctional statusCathedralHeritage designationUNESCO World Heritage SiteStyleBaroqueSpecificationsNumber of domes1Number of spires2Spire height68 m 223 ft 1 AdministrationDioceseRoman Catholic Diocese of Saint GallenClergyBishop s Markus BuchelUNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriaCultural ii ivReference268Inscription1983 7th Session Hot air balloon shaped as the Abbey of Saint Gall Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Golden Age 1 3 Silver Age 1 4 Under the Prince Abbots 1 4 1 An associate of the Swiss Confederation 1 4 2 End of the Prince Abbots 2 Cultural treasures 3 People of the abbey 3 1 List of abbots 3 2 Nuns 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 External links 7 Further readingHistory EditFoundation Edit Around 612 Gallus according to tradition an Irish monk and disciple and companion of Saint Columbanus established a hermitage on the site that would become the monastery He lived in his cell until his death in 646 and was buried there 3 in Arbon Canton of Thurgau 4 Afterwards the people venerated him as a saint and prayed at his tomb for his intercession in times of danger 4 Following Gallus death his disciples remained living together in his cell and followed the rule of St Columban which combined prayer work of the hands reading and teaching 5 They aided and taught virtue to the many pilgrims who came to St Gall s tomb 5 St Magnus was the first successor of St Gallen but he soon left on a mission to Allgau Swabia 5 His successors were the deacon Stephen and the priest Magulfe under whom the news of St Gallen s miracles spread throughout most of Germany 5 Several different dates are given for the foundation of the monastery including 719 4 720 6 747 7 and the middle of the 8th century 8 A gentleman and judge of Thurgau Waltraf possibly Waltram or Gaudran in order to use the alms and collections that were being given at St Gall s tomb to found a more regular monastery attracted a local Alemannic pastor Otmar 5 Waltraf went to see Charles Martel gave him the property of the hermitage and asked him to give the administration of it to Otmar 5 Charles agreed and sent Otmar the finances to build a monastery After the death of Charles Martel his son Pepin continued to support them On the recommendation of his brother Carloman who had visited this monastery on his way to Italy Pepin gave the monastery privileges letters of protection and an assured income Pepin placed the rule of St Benedict in the hands of St Otmar to be substituted for that of St Columban 5 Otmar or Othmar is named as the founder and the first abbot of the Abbey of St Gall 9 During his abbacy the St Gall School was founded 9 Otmar extended St Gall s original hermit cell and adopted the Carolingian style for his building projects The abbey grew quickly many Alemannic noblemen entered to become monks and arts letters and sciences flourished The register of monastic professions at the end of abbot Otmar s rule makes mentions of 53 names Two monks of the Abbey of St Gall Magnus of Fussen and Theodor founded the monasteries in Kempten and Fussen in the Allgau With the growth in the number of monks the abbey also grew economically stronger Much land in Thurgau Zurichgau and in the rest of Alemannia as far as the Neckar was donated to the abbey by means of Stiftungen 4 Under abbot Waldo of Reichenau 740 814 copying of manuscripts was undertaken and a famous library was gathered Numerous Anglo Saxon and Irish monks came to copy manuscripts At Charlemagne s request Pope Adrian I sent distinguished cantors from Rome who instructed the monks in the use of the Gregorian chant In 744 the Alemannic nobleman Beata sold several properties to the abbey in order to finance his journey to Rome 10 Golden Age Edit In the subsequent century St Gall came into conflict with the nearby Bishopric of Constance which had recently acquired jurisdiction over the Abbey of Reichenau on Lake Constance It was not until Emperor Louis the Pious ruled 814 840 confirmed in 813 the imperial immediacy Reichsunmittelbarkeit of the abbey that this conflict ceased 3 The abbey became an Imperial Abbey Reichsabtei King Louis the German confirmed in 833 the immunity of the abbey and allowed the monks the free choice of their abbot 10 In 854 finally the Abbey of St Gall reached its full autonomy by King Louis the German releasing the abbey from the obligation to pay tithes to the Bishop of Constance From this time until the 10th century the abbey flourished It was home to several famous scholars including Notker of Liege Notker the Stammerer Notker Labeo Tuotilo and Hartker who developed the antiphonal liturgical books for the abbey During the 9th century a new larger church was built and the library was expanded Manuscripts on a wide variety of topics were purchased by the abbey and copies were made Over 400 manuscripts from this time have survived and are still in the library today 3 Silver Age Edit Between 924 and 933 the Magyars threatened the abbey and the books had to be removed to Reichenau for safety Not all the books were returned On 26 April 937 a fire broke out and destroyed much of the abbey and the adjoining settlement though the library was undamaged 10 About 954 they started to protect the monastery and buildings by a surrounding wall 8 Around 971 974 abbot Notker about whom almost nothing is known nephew of Notker Physicus finalized the walling and the adjoining settlements started to become the town of St Gall 10 In 1006 the abbey was the northernmost place where a sighting of the 1006 supernova was recorded The death of abbot Ulrich II on 9 December 1076 terminated the cultural silver age of the monastery 10 Under the Prince Abbots Edit Princely Abbey of Saint GallFurstabtei St Gallen1207 1798 nbsp Coat of armsStatusImperial AbbeyCapitalSt GallenCommon languagesHigh AlemannicGovernmentPrincipalityHistorical eraMiddle Ages Renaissance Baroque Monastery founded719 Became a Princely Abbey1207 Became Old Swiss Confederacy protectorateAugust 17 1451 Pillaged by the Old Swiss Confederacy1712 Secularised to Helvetic Republic canton of Santis nbsp 1798 Helvetic Republic collapsed city and abbey became part of the newly founded canton of St Gallen nbsp 1803Preceded by Succeeded by nbsp Duchy of Swabia Canton of Santis nbsp nbsp The territories of the Abbey of St Gall from the mid 15th century to 1798In 1207 abbot Ulrich von Sax becomes a Prince Reichsfurst or simply Furst of the Holy Roman Empire by King Philip of Germany The abbey became a Princely Abbey Reichsabtei As the abbey became more involved in local politics it entered a period of decline 3 The city of St Gallen proper progressively freed itself from the rule of the abbot acquiring Imperial immediacy and by the late 15th century was recognized as a Free imperial city 11 By about 1353 the guilds headed by the cloth weavers guild gained control of the civic government In 1415 the city bought its liberty from the German king King Sigismund 8 During the 14th century Humanists 3 were allowed to carry off some of the rare texts from the abbey library In the late 14th and early 15th centuries the farmers of the abbot s personal estates known as Appenzell from Latin abbatis cella meaning cell i e estate of the abbot began seeking independence In 1401 the first of the Appenzell Wars broke out and following the Appenzell victory at Stoss in 1405 they became allies of the Swiss Confederation in 1411 During the Appenzell Wars the town of St Gallen often sided with Appenzell against the abbey So when Appenzell allied with the Swiss the town of St Gallen followed just a few months later 8 The abbot became an ally of several members of the Swiss Confederation Zurich Lucerne Schwyz and Glarus in 1451 While Appenzell and St Gallen became full members of the Swiss Confederation in 1454 Then in 1457 the town of St Gallen became officially free from the abbot 8 In 1468 the abbot Ulrich Rosch bought the County of Toggenburg from the representatives of its counts after the family died out in 1436 In 1487 he built a monastery at Rorschach on Lake Constance to which he planned to move However he encountered stiff resistance from the St Gallen citizenry other clerics and the Appenzell nobility in the Rhine Valley who were concerned about their holdings The town of St Gallen wanted to restrict the increase of power in the abbey and simultaneously increase the power of the town The mayor of St Gallen Ulrich Varnbuler established contact with farmers and Appenzell residents led by the fanatical Hermann Schwendiner who were seeking an opportunity to weaken the abbot Initially he protested to the abbot and the representatives of the four sponsoring Confederate cantons Zurich Lucerne Schwyz and Glarus against the construction of the new abbey in Rorschach Then on July 28 1489 he had armed troops from St Gallen and Appenzell destroy the buildings already under construction 8 When the abbot complained to the Confederates about the damages and demanded full compensation Varnbuler responded with a counter suit and in cooperation with Schwendiner rejected the arbitration efforts of the non partisan Confederates He motivated the clerics from Wil to Rorschach to discard their loyalty to the abbey and spoke against the abbey at the town meeting at Waldkirch where the popular league was formed He was confident that the four sponsoring cantons would not intervene with force due to the prevailing tensions between the Confederation and the Swabian League He was strengthened in his resolve by the fact that the people of St Gallen elected him again to the highest magistrate in 1490 An associate of the Swiss Confederation Edit However in early 1490 the four cantons decided to carry out their duty to the abbey and to invade the St Gallen canton with an armed force The people of Appenzell and the local clerics submitted to this force without noteworthy resistance while the city of St Gallen braced for a fight to the finish However when they learned that their compatriots had given up the fight they lost confidence the result was that they concluded a peace pact that greatly restricted the city s powers and burdened the city with serious penalties and reparations payments Varnbuler and Schwendiner fled to the court of King Maximilian and lost all their property in St Gallen and Appenzell However the abbot s reliance on the Swiss to support him reduced his position almost to that of a subject district 8 The town adopted the Reformation in 1524 while the abbey remained Catholic which damaged relations between the town and abbey Both the abbot and a representative of the town were admitted to the Swiss Tagsatzung or Diet as the closest associates of the Confederation 8 In the 16th century the abbey was raided by Calvinist groups which scattered many of the old books 3 In 1530 abbot Diethelm began a restoration that stopped the decline and led to an expansion of the schools and library nbsp The interior of the cathedral is one of the most important baroque monuments in SwitzerlandUnder abbot Pius Reher 1630 54 a printing press was started In 1712 during the Toggenburg war also called the second war of Villmergen the Abbey of St Gall was pillaged by the Swiss They took most of the books and manuscripts to Zurich and Bern For security the abbey was forced to request the protection of the townspeople of St Gallen Until 1457 the townspeople had been serfs of the abbey but they had grown in power until they were protecting the abbey End of the Prince Abbots Edit Following the disturbances the abbey was still the largest religious city state in Switzerland with over 77 000 inhabitants 12 A final attempt to expand the abbey resulted in the demolition of most of the medieval monastery The new structures including the cathedral by architect Peter Thumb 1681 1766 13 were designed in the late Baroque style and constructed between 1755 and 1768 The large and ornate new abbey did not remain a monastery for very long In 1798 the Prince Abbot s secular power was suppressed and the abbey was secularized The monks were driven out and moved into other abbeys The abbey became a separate See in 1846 with the abbey church as its cathedral and a portion of the monastic buildings for the bishop Cultural treasures Edit nbsp The Plan of St Gall the only surviving major architectural drawing from the Early Middle Ages nbsp The diagram version of the PlanThe Abbey library of Saint Gall is recognized as one of the richest medieval libraries in the world It is home to one of the most comprehensive collections of early medieval books in the German speaking part of Europe As of 2005 update the library consists of over 160 000 books of which 2100 are handwritten Nearly half of the handwritten books are from the Middle Ages and 400 are over 1000 years old 2 Lately the Stiftsbibliothek has launched a project for the digitisation of the priceless manuscript collection which currently December 2009 contains 355 2 documents that are available on the Codices Electronici Sangallenses webpage The library interior is exquisitely realised in the Rococo style with carved polished wood stucco and paint used to achieve its overall effect It was designed by the architect Peter Thumb and is open to the public In addition it holds exhibitions as well as concerts and other events 14 One of the more interesting documents in the Stiftsbibliothek is a copy of Priscian s Institutiones grammaticae which contains the poem Is acher in gaith in nocht written in Old Irish The library also preserves a unique 9th century document known as the Plan of St Gall the only surviving major architectural drawing from the roughly 700 year period between the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the 13th century The Plan drawn was never actually built and was so named because it was kept at the famous medieval monastery library where it remains to this day The plan was an ideal of what a well designed and well supplied monastery should have as envisioned by one of the synods held at Aachen for the reform of monasticism in the Frankish empire during the early years of emperor Louis the Pious between 814 and 817 A late 9th century drawing of Paul lecturing an agitated crowd of Jews and gentiles part of a copy of a Pauline epistles produced at and still held by the monastery was included in a medieval drawing show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York the summer of 2009 A reviewer noted that the artist had a special talent for depicting hair with the saint s beard ending in curling droplets of ink 15 St Gall is noted for its early use of the neume the basic element of Western and Eastern systems of musical notation prior to the invention of five line staff notation The earliest extant manuscripts are from the 9th or 10th century In 1983 the Convent of St Gall was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List as a perfect example of a great Carolingian monastery 16 People of the abbey EditList of abbots Edit There were a total of 73 ruling abbots including six anti abbots between 719 and 1805 A complete collection of abbots biographies was published by Henggeler 1929 A table of abbots names complete with their coats of arms was printed by Beat Jakob Anton Hiltensperger in 1778 17 Othmar 719 759 John 759 60 782 Ratpert 782 Waldo 782 784 Werdo 784 812 Wolfleoz 812 816 Gozbert 816 837 Expanded the buildings started collecting books for the library Bernwig 837 840 41 Engilbert I 840 841 Grimald 841 872 Hartmut 872 883 Bernhard 883 890 Solomon 890 919 Abbot of 11 other monasteries and Bishop of Constance Hartmann 922 925 Engilbert II 925 933 Thieto 933 942 Craloh 942 958 Anno 953 954 anti abbot Purchart I 958 971 Notker 971 975 nephew of Notker Physicus Ymmo 976 984 Ulrich I 984 990 Kerhart 990 1001 Purchart II 1001 1022 Thietpald 1022 1034 Nortpert 1034 1072 Ulrich II 1072 1076 Ulrich of Eppenstein 1077 1121 Lutold 1077 c 1083 anti abbot Werinhar 1083 1086 anti abbot Manegold von Mammern 1121 1133 Heinrich von Twiel 1121 1122 anti abbot Werinher 1133 1167 Ulrich von Tegerfelden 1167 1199 Ulrich von Veringen 1199 1200 Heinrich von Klingen 1200 1204 Ulrich von Sax 1204 1220 Lord of Hohensax and first Prince Abbot Rudolf von Guttingen 1220 1226 Konrad von Bussnang 1226 1239 Walter von Trauchburg 1239 1244 Berchtold von Falkenstein 1244 1272 Ulrich von Guttingen 1272 1277 Heinrich von Wartenberg 1272 1274 anti abbot Rumo von Ramstein 1277 1281 Wilhelm von Montfort 1281 1301 Konrad von Gundelfingen 1288 1291 anti abbot sponsored by Rudolf I of Germany Heinrich von Ramstein 1301 1318 Hiltbold von Werstein 1318 1329 Rudolf von Montfort 1330 1333 Hermann von Bonstetten 1333 1360 Georg von Wildenstein 1360 1379 Kuno von Stoffeln 1379 1411 Heinrich von Gundelfingen 1411 1418 Konrad von Pegau 1418 1419 Heinrich von Mansdorf 1419 1426 Eglolf Blarer 1426 1442 Kaspar von Breitenlandenberg 1442 1463 Ulrich Rosch 1463 1491 Bought the county of Toggenburg In 1487 he built a monastery at Rorschach Gotthard Giel von Glattburg 1491 1504 Franz von Gaisberg 1504 1529 Abbot when the Reformation took place Kilian Germann 1529 1530 Elected to prevent the Reformation from entering the Abbey Diethelm Blarer von Wartensee 1530 1564 Expanded the Abbey known as the Third Founder due to his work on the Abbey Otmar Kunz 1564 1577 Joachim Opser 1577 1594 Bernhard Muller 1594 1630 Pius Reher 1630 1654 Gallus Alt 1654 1687 Celestino Sfondrati 1687 1696 Leodegar Burgisser 1696 1717 Joseph von Rudolphi 1717 1740 Colestin Gugger von Staudach 1740 1767 Beda Angehrn 1767 1796 Pankraz Vorster 1796 1805 Nuns Edit Wiborada died 926 First woman formally canonized by the Catholic Church See also EditList of Carolingian monasteries Carolingian architecture Carolingian art Carolingian dynasty Carolingian Empire Carolingian Renaissance Waltharius Ekkehard INotes and references EditWalter William Horn s Papers Regarding The Plan of St Gall production materials 1967 1979 are housed in the Department of Special Collections and University Archives at Stanford University Libraries Federal Office of Culture Retrieved June 15 2022 a b c Codices Electronici Sangallenses Description Archived from the original on 2017 07 02 Retrieved 2008 04 23 a b c d e f Alston Cyprian 1909 Abbey of St Gall In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 6 New York Robert Appleton Company a b c d Saint Gall Princely Abbey in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland a b c d e f g Butler Alban 1808 Vies des peres des martyrs et des autres principaux saints tirees des actes originaux et des monumens les plus authentiques avec des notes historiques et critiques Chez Broulhiet editeur rue Saint Rome pp 261 65 OCLC 71811056 Sankt Gallen Encyclopaedia Britannica online Retrieved 2015 01 25 Abbey of St Gall World Heritage List United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO 1983 Archived from the original on 2017 05 09 Retrieved 2015 01 26 a b c d e f g h Coolidge William Augustus Brevoort 1911 St Gall In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 4 a b De Rijk L M 1963 On the Curri cul um of the Arts of the Trivium at St Gall from c 850 c 1000 Vivarium 1 1 35 86 doi 10 1163 156853463x00036 ISSN 0042 7543 a b c d e Zeittafel zur Geschichte der Abtei St Gallen History chronology about the Abbey of St Gall PDF in German Staatskanzlei St Gallen Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2015 01 25 St Gallen in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Religious Secular Land Holders in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Hempel Eberhard 1965 Baroque art and architecture in central Europe Germany Austria Switzerland Hungary Czechoslovakia Poland Painting and sculpture seventeenth and eighteenth centuries architecture sixteenth to eighteenth centuries Baltimore Penguin Books p 163 St Gall Library website limited English information in German Archived July 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine Those Medieval Monks Could Draw Review by Roberta Smith The New York Times June 18 2009 6 19 09 p C25 of the NY ed Retrieved 6 19 09 Pen and Parchment Drawing in the Middle Ages runs through August 23 2009 UNESCO website Archived 2017 05 09 at the Wayback Machine accessed 30 December 2009 Henggeler P Rudolf Professbuch der furstl Benediktinerabtei der Heiligen Gallus und Otmar zu St Gallen Monasticon Benedictinum Helvetiae 1 Einsiedeln 1929 History of the Abbey Archived 2012 06 04 at the Wayback Machine in German See also Herzog Johann Jakob 1860 The Protestant theological and ecclesiastical encyclopedia Volume 2 Lindsay amp Blakiston pp 351 353 Schaff Phillip 1910 The new Schaff Herzog encyclopedia of religious knowledge Funk and Wagnalls Company pp 196 283 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Furstabtei St Gallen Stiftsbibliothek Sankt Gallen Codices Electronici Sangallenses Archived 2016 11 09 at the Wayback Machine project for the digitisation of the medieval manuscripts at Sankt Gallen E codices Virtual Manuscript Library of Switzerland St Gall Plan presents a digitised version of the St Gall Plan and zoomable reproductions of Carolingian manuscripts from St Gall UNESCO World Heritage Listing for the Convent of St GallFurther reading Editvon Scheffel Joseph Viktor 1895 Ekkehard A Tale of the Tenth Century Google eBook Portal nbsp Switzerland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abbey of Saint Gall amp oldid 1176140425, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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