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Saint Emmeram's Abbey

49°0′55″N 12°5′34″E / 49.01528°N 12.09278°E / 49.01528; 12.09278

Imperial Abbey of St. Emmeram
Reichsabtei Sankt Emmeram
1295–1806
StatusImperial Abbey
CapitalSt. Emmeram's Abbey
GovernmentTheocracy
Historical eraMiddle Ages
• Abbey founded
c. 739
• Separated from
    bishopric

975 1295
• Gained Reichsfreiheit
1295
• Abbot raised to
    Reichsfürst

1731
• Mediatised to new
    Archbishopric¹
1806
• Ceded to Bavaria on
    Imperial collapse

January 6, 1806
Today part ofGermany
1: The Bishopric, the Imperial City and all three Imperial Abbeys were mediatised simultaneously.
Small section of the extensive St. Emmeram's buildings
Main inner courtyard

Saint Emmeram's Abbey (German: Kloster Sankt Emmeram or Reichsabtei Sankt Emmeram), now known as Schloss Thurn und Taxis, Schloss St. Emmeram or St. Emmeram's Basilica, was a Benedictine monastery founded in about 739 at Regensburg in Bavaria (modern-day southeastern Germany) at the grave of the itinerant Frankish bishop Saint Emmeram.[1]

History Edit

When the monastery was founded in about 739, the bishops of Regensburg were abbots in commendam, a common practice at the time which was not always to the advantage of the abbeys concerned. In 975, Saint Wolfgang of Regensburg, then bishop of Regensburg and abbot of St. Emmeram's, voluntarily gave up the position of abbot and severed the connection, making the abbots of St. Emmeram's independent of the bishopric. He was one of the first German bishops to do this, and his example in this was much copied across Germany in the years following. The first independent abbot was Ramwold (later the Blessed Ramwold). Both he and Saint Wolfgang were advocates of the monastic reforms of Gorze.

Saint Wolfgang, who was made bishop in 972, ordered that a library be constructed at St. Emmeram shortly after his arrival in Regensburg. An active scriptorium had existed at St. Emmeram in the Carolingian period, but it is not known whether it occupied a special building, and it appears that relatively few manuscripts, of poor quality, were produced there during the early tenth century.[2] Over time, some works in the scriptorium were copied by monks, some works were preserved from the Carolingian period, and others were acquired as gifts.[2] The library became well supplied with works by early Christian writers such as Saint Augustine, as well as by ancient writers such as Virgil and Seneca. In addition to works that had an overt religious or inspirational purpose, the library held a large collection of manuscripts used in the monastery school, focusing on subjects such as logic, arithmetic, rhetoric, grammar, and even astronomy and music.[2] By the early eleventh century, the library at St. Emmeram had acquired a reputation for its collection. Neighboring libraries began requesting to borrow books for copying. An eleventh-century librarian at the monastery, Froumund of Tegernsee, referred to the book room as a bibliotheca, a term implying an extensive manuscript collection.[2] The scriptorium of St. Emmeram's in the Early Middle Ages became a significant centre of book production and illumination, the home of works such as the sacramentary of Emperor Henry II (produced between 1002 and 1014) and the Uta Codex (shortly after 1002).

In 1295 the counter-king Adolf of Nassau granted the abbey the regalia and made it reichsunmittelbar (i.e., an Imperial abbey, an independent sovereign power subject directly to the emperor).

After a decline in its significance during the 16th century the abbey enjoyed a resurgence in the 17th and 18th centuries under abbots Frobenius Forster, Coelestin Steiglehner, Roman Zirngibl and Placidus Heinrich, great scholars, particularly in the natural sciences. Under their leadership the abbey academy came to rival the Münchner Akademie. St. Emmeram's had a long tradition of scientific enquiry dating from the Middle Ages, in witness of which the monastery preserved the astrolabe of William of Hirsau.

In 1731, the abbots were raised to the status of Princes of the Empire (Reichsfürsten). Between 1731 and 1733 there followed the magnificent Baroque refurbishment, by the Asam brothers, of the abbey church, which had been repeatedly burnt out and repaired.

In 1803, St. Emmeram's, along with the Imperial City of Regensburg, the Bishopric of Regensburg and the two other Imperial Abbeys (Niedermünster and Obermünster), lost its previous politically independent status to the newly formed Principality of Regensburg, often referred to as the Archbishopric of Regensburg, under the former Prince-Primate Carl Theodor von Dalberg. In 1803 he donated a large garden at the abbey to the Royal Bavarian Botanical Society of Regensburg for construction of a botanic garden that was maintained until 1855.[3][4] After the Treaty of Paris of 1810, the entire Principality of Regensburg was transferred to Bavaria.

The treasures of St. Emmeram's (for example, the ciborium of Arnulf, now in the Residenz) and its valuable library (including Muspilli, the Codex Aureus of St. Emmeram, and Dialogus de laudibus sanctae crucis) were mostly removed to Munich.[5]

Schloss Thurn und Taxis Edit

In 1812 the monastic buildings were granted to the Princes of Thurn und Taxis, who had St. Emmeram's Abbey converted as a residence known from then on as Schloss Thurn und Taxis, sometimes called Schloss Sankt Emmeram. St. Emmeram Palace (or Abbey) is the largest private residence in Germany, with 517 rooms and a floor area of 21,460 m2 (231,000 sq. ft).[6] The St. Emmeram Palace with its park in Regensburg's city center covers five hectares.[7] The Thurn und Taxis princely family still uses the palace as its primary residence.[6]

St. Emmeram's Basilica Edit

 
Central nave of the church and apse with high altar and two side altars

The abbey church became a parish church, to which, on 18 February 1964, Pope Paul VI accorded the status of a basilica minor.[8] The Romanesque basilica with three aisles, three choirs and a west transept is based on an original church building from the second half of the 8th century. Since that time it has been many times partly destroyed and rebuilt. The oldest extant part of the building is the ring crypt under the choir of the northern aisle. The three medieval, carved stone reliefs on the north portal, dating from about 1052, the oldest of their type in Germany, represent Christ, Saint Emmeram and Saint Denis. The west transept has a painted wooden ceiling depicting Saint Benedict of Nursia. The crypt of Saint Wolfgang is beneath the choir of Saint Denis. Next to Saint Denis's altar in the northern aisle is the tomb of Emma, Queen of the East Franks (died 876), let into the wall. The high altar dates from 1669.

The tower has six bells.

Notable burials in St. Emmeram's Edit

 
St. Rupert

St. Rupert's church Edit

St. Rupert's church was formerly the parish church of the monastery. The church, with two aisles, was constructed in the second half of the 11th century, but was frequently adapted and enlarged. The nave is from the 14th century, the choir from 1405, the high altar with four pillars and a picture of the baptism of Duke Theodo of Bavaria by Saint Rupert from 1690, and the decoration and fittings from the 17th and 18th centuries. The tabernacle on the north side of the choir has figures of Saint Rupert and other saints. The altar of Saint Michael dated from 1713. The nave is decorated with pictures of the miracles of Saint Rupert.

Abbots Edit

Bishops of Regensburg (abbots ex officio) Edit

  • Gaubald (739–761)
  • Sigerich (762–768)
  • Sintpert (768–791)
  • Adalwin (792–816)
  • Baturich (817–847)
  • Erchanfrid (c. 847–864)
  • Ambricho (c. 864–891)
  • Aspert (891–894)
  • Tuto (c. 894–930)
  • Isangrim (930–941)
  • Gunther (942)
  • Michael (c. 942–972)
  • Wolfgang (972–975)

Abbots Edit

  • Blessed Ramwold (975–1001)
  • Wolfram (1001–1006)
  • Richolf (1006–1028)
  • Hartwich (1028–1029)
  • Burkhard (1030–1037)
  • Ulrich I (1037-1042)
  • Erchanbert (1042–1043)
  • Peringer I (1044–1048)
  • Reginward (1048–1060 ?)
  • Eberhard I (c. 1060–1068)
  • Rupert (1068–1095)
  • Pabo (1095 – c. 1106)
  • Reginhard (c. 1106–1129?)
  • Engelfrid (1129–1142)
  • Pabo (2nd time) (1142–1143)
  • Berthold I (1143–1149)
  • Adalbert I (1149–1177)
  • Peringer II (1177–1201)
  • Eberhard II (1201–1217)
  • Ulrich II (1217–1219)
  • Berthold II (1219–1235)
  • Wulfing (c. 1235 – c. 1247)
  • Ulrich III (1247–1263)
  • Friedrich I von Theuern (1263–1271)
  • Ulrich IV von Prunn (1271)
  • Haimo (1272–1275)
  • Wolfgang I Sturm (1275–1279)
  • Wernher (1279–1292)
  • Karl (1292–1305)
  • Heinrich von Winzer (1305–1312)
  • Baldwin Kötzl (1312–1324)
  • Adalbert II (Albert) von Schmidmühlen (1324–1358)
  • Alto von Tannstein (1358–1385)
  • Friedrich II von Weidenberg (1385–1395)
  • Johannes I Hauner (1395–1402)
  • Ulrich V Pettendorfer (1402–1423)
  • Wolfhard Strauß (1423–1452)
  • Hartung Pfersfelder (1452–1458)
  • Konrad Pebenhauser (1459–1465)
  • Michael Teuer (1465–1471)
  • Johannes II Tegernpeck (1471–1493)
  • Erasmus I Münzer (1493–1517)
  • Ambrosius I Münzer (1517–1535)
  • Leonhard Pfenningmann (1535–1540)
  • Erasmus II Nittenauer (1540–1561)
  • Blasius Baumgartner (1561–1575)
  • Ambrosius II Mayrhofer (1575–1583)
  • Hieronymus I Weiß (1583–1609)
  • Hieronymus II Feury (1609–1623)
  • Johannes III Nablaß (1623–1639)
  • Placidus Judmann (1639–1655)
  • Coelestin I Vogl (1655–1691)
  • Ignatius von Trauner (1691–1694)
  • Johannes IV Baptist Hemm (1694–1719)
  • Wolfgang II Mohr (1719–1725)

Prince-Abbots Edit

  • Anselm Godin de Tampezo (1725–1742)
  • Johann V Baptist Kraus (1742–1762)
  • Frobenius Forster (1762–1791)
  • Coelestin II Steiglehner (1791–1803; died 1819)

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Sankt Emmeram is sometimes referred to as Sankt Emmeran
  2. ^ a b c d Kyle, Joseph D. (1980). The Monastery Library at St. Emmeram (Regensburg). The Journal of Library History, Vol. 15, No. 1 (Winter, 1980), pp. 1-21. University of Texas Press.
  3. ^ Bauer, Karl (2014). Regensburg Kunst-, Kultur- und Alltagsgeschichte. MZ-Buchverlag in H. Gietl Verlag & Publikationsservice GmbH. pp. S. 29 ff. ISBN 9783866463004.
  4. ^ "History". Regensburg Botanical Society. Retrieved 6 October 2022.
  5. ^ "Dialogue in Praise of the Holy Cross". World Digital Library. 1170. Retrieved 2014-06-03.
  6. ^ a b Records, Guinness World (September 11, 2014). Guinness World Records / Castles / pp. 198 (255 pages). ISBN 9781908843708. Retrieved May 23, 2018. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  7. ^ "Schloss Thurn und Taxis Gartenschau, Ratisbonne". FoiresInfo (in French). June 21, 2018. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  8. ^ Old church layout 2005-12-31 at the Wayback Machine (JPEG image)

References Edit

  • Kallmünz, 1992. St. Emmeram in Regensburg. Geschichte - Kunst - Denkmalpflege. Thurn und Taxis-Studien 18.
  • Morsbach, P. (photos: A. Bunz), 1993: St. Emmeram zu Regensburg. Ehem. Benediktiner-Abteikirche. Großer Kunstführer Nr. 187. Schnell & Steiner: Regensburg.
  • 1803 – Die gelehrten Mönche und das Ende einer 1000-jährigen Tradition. Exhibition guide. Bischöfliches Ordinariat Regensburg: Regensburg, 2003.

External links Edit

  • Schloss Thurn und Taxis in Regensburg
  • (in German)
  • (in German) Klöster in Bayern: Sankt Emmeram, Regensburg
  • (in German) Kreutzgang des Kloster in National-Archiv für Deutschlands Kunst und Alterthum, Nürnberg 1828 (images)
  • (in German)
  • Kreutzgang des Klosters in National-Archiv für Deutschlands Kunst und Alterthum, Nürnberg 1828
  • Privileg Karls des Großen für Kloster St. Emmeram, 22.2.794, "digitalised image". Photograph Archive of Old Original Documents (Lichtbildarchiv älterer Originalurkunden). University of Marburg.

saint, emmeram, abbey, 01528, 09278, 01528, 09278, imperial, abbey, emmeramreichsabtei, sankt, emmeram1295, 1806statusimperial, abbeycapitalst, emmeram, abbeygovernmenttheocracyhistorical, eramiddle, ages, abbey, foundedc, separated, from, bishopric975, 1295, . 49 0 55 N 12 5 34 E 49 01528 N 12 09278 E 49 01528 12 09278 Imperial Abbey of St EmmeramReichsabtei Sankt Emmeram1295 1806StatusImperial AbbeyCapitalSt Emmeram s AbbeyGovernmentTheocracyHistorical eraMiddle Ages Abbey foundedc 739 Separated from bishopric975 1295 Gained Reichsfreiheit1295 Abbot raised to Reichsfurst1731 Mediatised to new Archbishopric 1806 Ceded to Bavaria on Imperial collapseJanuary 6 1806Preceded by Succeeded byElectorate of the Palatinate Principality of RegensburgToday part ofGermany1 The Bishopric the Imperial City and all three Imperial Abbeys were mediatised simultaneously Small section of the extensive St Emmeram s buildingsMain inner courtyardSaint Emmeram s Abbey German Kloster Sankt Emmeram or Reichsabtei Sankt Emmeram now known as Schloss Thurn und Taxis Schloss St Emmeram or St Emmeram s Basilica was a Benedictine monastery founded in about 739 at Regensburg in Bavaria modern day southeastern Germany at the grave of the itinerant Frankish bishop Saint Emmeram 1 Contents 1 History 2 Schloss Thurn und Taxis 3 St Emmeram s Basilica 3 1 Notable burials in St Emmeram s 4 St Rupert s church 5 Abbots 5 1 Bishops of Regensburg abbots ex officio 5 2 Abbots 5 3 Prince Abbots 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditWhen the monastery was founded in about 739 the bishops of Regensburg were abbots in commendam a common practice at the time which was not always to the advantage of the abbeys concerned In 975 Saint Wolfgang of Regensburg then bishop of Regensburg and abbot of St Emmeram s voluntarily gave up the position of abbot and severed the connection making the abbots of St Emmeram s independent of the bishopric He was one of the first German bishops to do this and his example in this was much copied across Germany in the years following The first independent abbot was Ramwold later the Blessed Ramwold Both he and Saint Wolfgang were advocates of the monastic reforms of Gorze Saint Wolfgang who was made bishop in 972 ordered that a library be constructed at St Emmeram shortly after his arrival in Regensburg An active scriptorium had existed at St Emmeram in the Carolingian period but it is not known whether it occupied a special building and it appears that relatively few manuscripts of poor quality were produced there during the early tenth century 2 Over time some works in the scriptorium were copied by monks some works were preserved from the Carolingian period and others were acquired as gifts 2 The library became well supplied with works by early Christian writers such as Saint Augustine as well as by ancient writers such as Virgil and Seneca In addition to works that had an overt religious or inspirational purpose the library held a large collection of manuscripts used in the monastery school focusing on subjects such as logic arithmetic rhetoric grammar and even astronomy and music 2 By the early eleventh century the library at St Emmeram had acquired a reputation for its collection Neighboring libraries began requesting to borrow books for copying An eleventh century librarian at the monastery Froumund of Tegernsee referred to the book room as a bibliotheca a term implying an extensive manuscript collection 2 The scriptorium of St Emmeram s in the Early Middle Ages became a significant centre of book production and illumination the home of works such as the sacramentary of Emperor Henry II produced between 1002 and 1014 and the Uta Codex shortly after 1002 In 1295 the counter king Adolf of Nassau granted the abbey the regalia and made it reichsunmittelbar i e an Imperial abbey an independent sovereign power subject directly to the emperor After a decline in its significance during the 16th century the abbey enjoyed a resurgence in the 17th and 18th centuries under abbots Frobenius Forster Coelestin Steiglehner Roman Zirngibl and Placidus Heinrich great scholars particularly in the natural sciences Under their leadership the abbey academy came to rival the Munchner Akademie St Emmeram s had a long tradition of scientific enquiry dating from the Middle Ages in witness of which the monastery preserved the astrolabe of William of Hirsau In 1731 the abbots were raised to the status of Princes of the Empire Reichsfursten Between 1731 and 1733 there followed the magnificent Baroque refurbishment by the Asam brothers of the abbey church which had been repeatedly burnt out and repaired In 1803 St Emmeram s along with the Imperial City of Regensburg the Bishopric of Regensburg and the two other Imperial Abbeys Niedermunster and Obermunster lost its previous politically independent status to the newly formed Principality of Regensburg often referred to as the Archbishopric of Regensburg under the former Prince Primate Carl Theodor von Dalberg In 1803 he donated a large garden at the abbey to the Royal Bavarian Botanical Society of Regensburg for construction of a botanic garden that was maintained until 1855 3 4 After the Treaty of Paris of 1810 the entire Principality of Regensburg was transferred to Bavaria The treasures of St Emmeram s for example the ciborium of Arnulf now in the Residenz and its valuable library including Muspilli the Codex Aureus of St Emmeram and Dialogus de laudibus sanctae crucis were mostly removed to Munich 5 Schloss Thurn und Taxis EditIn 1812 the monastic buildings were granted to the Princes of Thurn und Taxis who had St Emmeram s Abbey converted as a residence known from then on as Schloss Thurn und Taxis sometimes called Schloss Sankt Emmeram St Emmeram Palace or Abbey is the largest private residence in Germany with 517 rooms and a floor area of 21 460 m2 231 000 sq ft 6 The St Emmeram Palace with its park in Regensburg s city center covers five hectares 7 The Thurn und Taxis princely family still uses the palace as its primary residence 6 St Emmeram s Basilica Edit Central nave of the church and apse with high altar and two side altarsThe abbey church became a parish church to which on 18 February 1964 Pope Paul VI accorded the status of a basilica minor 8 The Romanesque basilica with three aisles three choirs and a west transept is based on an original church building from the second half of the 8th century Since that time it has been many times partly destroyed and rebuilt The oldest extant part of the building is the ring crypt under the choir of the northern aisle The three medieval carved stone reliefs on the north portal dating from about 1052 the oldest of their type in Germany represent Christ Saint Emmeram and Saint Denis The west transept has a painted wooden ceiling depicting Saint Benedict of Nursia The crypt of Saint Wolfgang is beneath the choir of Saint Denis Next to Saint Denis s altar in the northern aisle is the tomb of Emma Queen of the East Franks died 876 let into the wall The high altar dates from 1669 The tower has six bells Large square pillars of the Ramwold church building from around 980 1000 Wolfgang Crypt in the west building c 1050 Painted wooden ceiling depicting Saint Benedict of NursiaNotable burials in St Emmeram s Edit Saint Emmeram Saint Wolfgang Blessed Ramwold Emma Queen of the East Franks consort of Louis the German Blessed Aurelia anchorite The Blessed Bishops Wolflek Gaubald and Tuto Arnulf of Carinthia King of the East Franks and Holy Roman Emperor His son King Louis the Child Arnulf the Wicked Duke of Bavaria Relics of Saints Maximianus and Calcidonius Johannes Aventinus historian of Bavaria Engelberga wife of Louis II Holy Roman Emperor St RupertSt Rupert s church EditSt Rupert s church was formerly the parish church of the monastery The church with two aisles was constructed in the second half of the 11th century but was frequently adapted and enlarged The nave is from the 14th century the choir from 1405 the high altar with four pillars and a picture of the baptism of Duke Theodo of Bavaria by Saint Rupert from 1690 and the decoration and fittings from the 17th and 18th centuries The tabernacle on the north side of the choir has figures of Saint Rupert and other saints The altar of Saint Michael dated from 1713 The nave is decorated with pictures of the miracles of Saint Rupert Abbots EditBishops of Regensburg abbots ex officio Edit Gaubald 739 761 Sigerich 762 768 Sintpert 768 791 Adalwin 792 816 Baturich 817 847 Erchanfrid c 847 864 Ambricho c 864 891 Aspert 891 894 Tuto c 894 930 Isangrim 930 941 Gunther 942 Michael c 942 972 Wolfgang 972 975 Abbots Edit Blessed Ramwold 975 1001 Wolfram 1001 1006 Richolf 1006 1028 Hartwich 1028 1029 Burkhard 1030 1037 Ulrich I 1037 1042 Erchanbert 1042 1043 Peringer I 1044 1048 Reginward 1048 1060 Eberhard I c 1060 1068 Rupert 1068 1095 Pabo 1095 c 1106 Reginhard c 1106 1129 Engelfrid 1129 1142 Pabo 2nd time 1142 1143 Berthold I 1143 1149 Adalbert I 1149 1177 Peringer II 1177 1201 Eberhard II 1201 1217 Ulrich II 1217 1219 Berthold II 1219 1235 Wulfing c 1235 c 1247 Ulrich III 1247 1263 Friedrich I von Theuern 1263 1271 Ulrich IV von Prunn 1271 Haimo 1272 1275 Wolfgang I Sturm 1275 1279 Wernher 1279 1292 Karl 1292 1305 Heinrich von Winzer 1305 1312 Baldwin Kotzl 1312 1324 Adalbert II Albert von Schmidmuhlen 1324 1358 Alto von Tannstein 1358 1385 Friedrich II von Weidenberg 1385 1395 Johannes I Hauner 1395 1402 Ulrich V Pettendorfer 1402 1423 Wolfhard Strauss 1423 1452 Hartung Pfersfelder 1452 1458 Konrad Pebenhauser 1459 1465 Michael Teuer 1465 1471 Johannes II Tegernpeck 1471 1493 Erasmus I Munzer 1493 1517 Ambrosius I Munzer 1517 1535 Leonhard Pfenningmann 1535 1540 Erasmus II Nittenauer 1540 1561 Blasius Baumgartner 1561 1575 Ambrosius II Mayrhofer 1575 1583 Hieronymus I Weiss 1583 1609 Hieronymus II Feury 1609 1623 Johannes III Nablass 1623 1639 Placidus Judmann 1639 1655 Coelestin I Vogl 1655 1691 Ignatius von Trauner 1691 1694 Johannes IV Baptist Hemm 1694 1719 Wolfgang II Mohr 1719 1725 Prince Abbots Edit Anselm Godin de Tampezo 1725 1742 Johann V Baptist Kraus 1742 1762 Frobenius Forster 1762 1791 Coelestin II Steiglehner 1791 1803 died 1819 Notes Edit Sankt Emmeram is sometimes referred to as Sankt Emmeran a b c d Kyle Joseph D 1980 The Monastery Library at St Emmeram Regensburg The Journal of Library History Vol 15 No 1 Winter 1980 pp 1 21 University of Texas Press Bauer Karl 2014 Regensburg Kunst Kultur und Alltagsgeschichte MZ Buchverlag in H Gietl Verlag amp Publikationsservice GmbH pp S 29 ff ISBN 9783866463004 History Regensburg Botanical Society Retrieved 6 October 2022 Dialogue in Praise of the Holy Cross World Digital Library 1170 Retrieved 2014 06 03 a b Records Guinness World September 11 2014 Guinness World Records Castles pp 198 255 pages ISBN 9781908843708 Retrieved May 23 2018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Schloss Thurn und Taxis Gartenschau Ratisbonne FoiresInfo in French June 21 2018 Retrieved May 23 2018 Old church layout Archived 2005 12 31 at the Wayback Machine JPEG image References EditKallmunz 1992 St Emmeram in Regensburg Geschichte Kunst Denkmalpflege Thurn und Taxis Studien 18 Morsbach P photos A Bunz 1993 St Emmeram zu Regensburg Ehem Benediktiner Abteikirche Grosser Kunstfuhrer Nr 187 Schnell amp Steiner Regensburg 1803 Die gelehrten Monche und das Ende einer 1000 jahrigen Tradition Exhibition guide Bischofliches Ordinariat Regensburg Regensburg 2003 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kloster St Emmeram Regensburg Schloss Thurn und Taxis in Regensburg in German Bischofliches Ordinariat Regensburg in German Kloster in Bayern Sankt Emmeram Regensburg in German Kreutzgang des Kloster in National Archiv fur Deutschlands Kunst und Alterthum Nurnberg 1828 images in German Virtual tour Kreutzgang des Klosters in National Archiv fur Deutschlands Kunst und Alterthum Nurnberg 1828 Privileg Karls des Grossen fur Kloster St Emmeram 22 2 794 digitalised image Photograph Archive of Old Original Documents Lichtbildarchiv alterer Originalurkunden University of Marburg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint Emmeram 27s Abbey amp oldid 1172240316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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