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St. Matthias' Abbey

St. Matthias' Abbey is a Benedictine monastery in Trier, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

St. Matthias' Abbey.

The abbey church, a Romanesque basilica, is a renowned place of pilgrimage because of the tomb of Saint Matthias the Apostle, after whom the abbey is named, located here since the 12th century, and the only burial of an apostle in Germany and north of the Alps. The abbey was originally named after Saint Eucharius, first Bishop of Trier, whose tomb is in the crypt. The church has been given the status of a minor basilica.

First foundation edit

Monks have lived in the present St. Matthias' Abbey since late antiquity. Cyrillus of Trier built an oratory here in the second half of the 5th century and gave the monks a rule.[1] The monastery adopted the Rule of Saint Benedict in about 977.

 
The tombs of Eucharius and Valerius

Since the 10th century the bones of the founders of the Archbishopric of Trier, bishops Eucharius and Valerius, have been preserved here.

 
The tomb of Saint Matthias

The bones of the Apostle Matthias were supposedly sent to Trier on the authority of the Empress Helena, mother of the Roman emperor Constantine I, but the relics were only discovered in 1127 during demolition work on the predecessor of the present church buildings, since which time the abbey has been a major centre of pilgrimage.[1]

In the 12th century, the manuscript now known as Kues 52, an important witness to the Collectaneum of Sedulius Scottus and the Proverbia Grecorum, was copied at St. Matthias'.[2]

Efforts to reform in the wake of the Council of Basel, under Johannes Rode, the Carthusian prior appointed by the bishop, led to spiritual and economic renewal, to the extent that St. Matthias' became an example for other monasteries. In 1433, at the request of Duke Otto of Brunswick, John Dederoth, having effected notable reforms at Clus Abbey, turned his attention to the extremely neglected and dilapidated Bursfelde Abbey. He was able to obtain two exemplary monks from St. Matthias' Abbey to maintain his reformed discipline there. In 1458 St. Matthias' joined the Bursfelde Congregation.

The eastern part of the crypt was added around 1500.[3] A Baroque facade was later added to the lower west front of the church.[4]

The abbey passed through the Reformation almost unscathed, but it was badly affected by wars and looting, and also by conflicts with various bishops or abbots. The last abbot was relieved of his office as early as 1783, years before the actual dissolution of the abbey, and management from then on lay in the hands of the prior.

 
Watercolour of the abbey, c. 1783
church bells

When the troubles of the French Revolution spilled over onto German territory, the abbey buildings were requisitioned by the French army, and monks were obliged to leave the abbey, at first with the intention that this was to be a temporary absence, living from 1794 to 1802 in the parish house (Mattheiser Pfarrhaus). In 1802 however the abbey was nationalised and secularised.[3] When the premises were sold off, the local businessman Christoph Philipp Nell acquired the bulk of the main building complex and used it with little alteration for his residence, thus preserving it from the demolition and gross alterations for industrial purposes that befell many other monastic buildings at this period.

Apart from the main abbey complex there remain, particularly in villages along the Moselle, many farmhouses and estate buildings which formed the abbey's economic basis before secularisation. They are often called "Mattheiser Hof" ("Matthias' farm") or other names making reference to the abbey. An especially large farm of this sort was the Roscheider Hof near the village of Merzlich (now Konz-Karthaus), now the Volkskunde- und Freilichtmuseum Roscheider Hof ("Local History and Open-air Museum, Roscheider Hof"), where the original building is preserved as one of the exhibits.

Second foundation edit

 
St. Matthias' Abbey from the Mariensäule

After several attempts to revive the monastery in the 19th century, monks from Seckau Abbey, part of the Beuron Congregation, moved into the Mattheiser Pfarrhaus after World War I. On 22 October 1922 the main building complex was rededicated as a Benedictine abbey and resettled.[3] The new community joined the Beuron Congregation.

In 1941 the National Socialist government suspended the monastery and the monks moved to Maria Laach Abbey. After their return in 1945 there was dissension over the care of the parish of St. Matthias, which was now independent of the Benedictine order, for whom parochial duties with the secure income they provided represented a staple economic resource. It was recommended that the monastic community should move to Tholey Abbey in the Saarland, a move which split the community between those who were willing to go to Tholey, and those who preferred to stay in Trier. Those monks who remained in St. Matthias' became independent of any congregation, and remained so until 1981, when they joined the Congregation of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary ("Congregatio Annuntiationis BMV").

 
Cloister (southern aisle)

Since 1991 the abbey has had a close link with Huysburg Priory in Saxony-Anhalt, refounded in 1972. In September 2004 the two monasteries joined as one community.

The community devotes itself to the cure of souls - in 2007 10,000 Roman Catholics belonged to the parish of St. Matthias - as well as hospital and pilgrimage duties. The community also receives guests and leads ecumenical discussions. Individual brothers may also pursue secular occupations, such as judge, town planner or teacher.

From 1981 to 2005 Dom Ansgar Schmidt led the community as its abbot until his election as President-Abbot of the Congregation. Ignatius Maaß was elected his successor, and nominated Matthias Vogt as his new prior; the benediction took place on 22 October 2005.

As of 2007 19 monks lived in the abbey.

Buildings and art edit

Basilica edit

 
Nave of the basilica

The Romanesque St. Matthias' Basilica, which was dedicated on 13 January 1148, combines four functions. It is the parish church of the parish of the same name; the monastic church of the Benedictine community; a pilgrimage church centred on the tomb of Saint Matthias the Apostle; and the burial church of the first bishops of Trier, Eucharius und Valerius.[1] The church building, like all such, is in a constant state of tension between on the one hand the preservation and care of the structure, and on the other the need to meet current demands.

The basilica has therefore been thoroughly transformed during a long-drawn-out exercise in cleaning up and alteration. The crypt has been extended by a further two bays and provided with new means of access. The place of the veneration of Saint Matthias the Apostle, as well as the altar space, have been adapted to modern requirements. Stable choir stalls have been built for the monks' choir. A lift has been installed for easier access to all levels. On 10 December 2007 during a solemn pontifical office with Bishop Reinhard Marx the bones of the Apostle Matthias in their shrine were translated to their final location in the crypt,[5] with the solemn dedication of the altar planned for 24 February 2008. The conclusion of the building works with an overhaul of the electrics and a final paint job is not presently possible due to financial constraints.

 
Gnadenkapelle in the northern aisle

The Abbey church is considered a Marian shrine as it contains a Gnadenbild, an image of the Blessed Virgin that depicts the pregnant Mary, gazing in contemplation at the child she carries.

Reliquary of the Cross edit

In the Chapel of the Cross (Kreuzkapelle) in the north side-tower of the basilica is kept the reliquary of the cross, or "staurotheca". It dates from the 13th century and is made of worked gold; in the centre is a golden cross set with precious stones, which is said to contain pieces of the True Cross. The Chapel of the Cross is accessible on guided tours.

Mattheiser Venus edit

The Mattheiser Venus or Venus of St. Matthias was an ancient Roman marble statue of the goddess Venus, which was formerly kept at the St. Matthias' Abbey. The statue of the goddess of love was kept on display in chains by the wall of the monastery marked with the following inscription:

„WOLT IHR WISSEN WAS ICH BIN
ICH BIN GEWESEN EIN ABGOTTIN
DA S. EVCHARIVS ZV TRIER KAM
ER MICH ZERBRACH MEIN EHR ABNAHM
ICH WAR GEEHRET ALS EIN GOTT
IETZ STEHEN ICH HIE DER WELT ZV SPOT.“

It was an established custom at the monastery to stone the statue annually to ritually celebrate the victory of Christianity over "Paganism" by annual desecration of the statue.[6] This custom allegedly took place since the Middle Ages, but is confirmed since at least 1551. The statue was reduced to rubble, but the remains of it was transferred by the French commander of the town to a historical society in 1811. It is now kept at the Rheinisches Landesmuseum Trier.[6]

 
Gate to the cemetery

Abbots (incomplete list) edit

  • 1211–1257: Jakob of Lorraine
  • 1416–1421: Herbrand von Guls
  • 1421–1439: Johannes Rode
  • 1439–1447: Johannes von Vorst
  • 1447–1451: Heinrich Wolff von Sponheim
  • 1451–0000: Johannes Donre
  • 1569–1573: Peter von Niederweiß
  • 1599–1612: Johann von Keil
  • 1629–1649: Nikolaus Trinkler
  • 1700–1727: Wilhelm Henn
  • 1727–1758: Modestus Manheim
  • 1758–1773: Adalbert Wiltz

After the refoundation:

  • 1922–1938: Laurentius Zeller (elected Archabbot of the Brazilian Congregation 1938)
  • 1939–1946: Basilius Ebel (1946–1966 Abbot of Maria Laach Abbey)
  • 1947–1949: Petrus Borne (1949–1976 Abbot of Tholey Abbey)

The community split in 1949: one part resettled in Tholey with Abbot Petrus Borne; the remainder in Trier belonged to no congregation and was directly subordinate to the Abbot-Primate of the Benedictine Order.

  • 1963–1969: Laurentius Klein
  • 1969–1981: Athanasius Polag
  • 1981–2005: Ansgar Schmidt (since 2004 President of the Congregation of the Annunciation)
  • 2005–0000: Ignatius Maaß

Relations to other communities edit

Delegations from St. Matthias' visit both Dinklage and Mirfield every year, who in turn send every year a delegation to St. Matthias'.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c "St Matthias' Abbey", Trier Tourismus und Marketing
  2. ^ Dean Simpson (1987), "The 'Proverbia Grecorum'", Traditio, 43: 1–22, doi:10.1017/S0362152900012460, JSTOR 27831196.
  3. ^ a b c "St. Matthias Abbey", Religiana
  4. ^ "St. Matthias' Abbey: Detail of lower half of facade of the abbey church with later Baroque additions", Raclin Murphy Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame
  5. ^ Press release of the Bishop's Vicar-general, 12 December 2007, accessed 24 March 2008
  6. ^ a b Zur Mattheiser Venus, see Kuhnen, Hans-Peter, ed. (2001). Das römische Trier. Führer zu archäologischen Denkmälern in Deutschland. Vol. 40. Stuttgart: Theiss. pp. 177f. ISBN 3-8062-1517-0.

References edit

External links edit

  • Official website (in German)
  • Ralf Arnert: "Seit 900 Jahren haben Pilger ihre Spuren auf dem geschichtsträchtigen Weg nach Trier hinterlassen" (article about pilgrimages to Trier) (in German)
  • Congregation of the Annunciation
  • Art history and church organ of St. Matthias' Basilica (in German)

49°44′17″N 6°37′55″E / 49.73806°N 6.63194°E / 49.73806; 6.63194

matthias, abbey, benedictine, monastery, trier, rhineland, palatinate, germany, abbey, church, romanesque, basilica, renowned, place, pilgrimage, because, tomb, saint, matthias, apostle, after, whom, abbey, named, located, here, since, 12th, century, only, bur. St Matthias Abbey is a Benedictine monastery in Trier Rhineland Palatinate Germany St Matthias Abbey The abbey church a Romanesque basilica is a renowned place of pilgrimage because of the tomb of Saint Matthias the Apostle after whom the abbey is named located here since the 12th century and the only burial of an apostle in Germany and north of the Alps The abbey was originally named after Saint Eucharius first Bishop of Trier whose tomb is in the crypt The church has been given the status of a minor basilica Contents 1 First foundation 2 Second foundation 3 Buildings and art 3 1 Basilica 3 2 Reliquary of the Cross 4 Mattheiser Venus 5 Abbots incomplete list 6 Relations to other communities 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksFirst foundation editMonks have lived in the present St Matthias Abbey since late antiquity Cyrillus of Trier built an oratory here in the second half of the 5th century and gave the monks a rule 1 The monastery adopted the Rule of Saint Benedict in about 977 nbsp The tombs of Eucharius and ValeriusSince the 10th century the bones of the founders of the Archbishopric of Trier bishops Eucharius and Valerius have been preserved here nbsp The tomb of Saint MatthiasThe bones of the Apostle Matthias were supposedly sent to Trier on the authority of the Empress Helena mother of the Roman emperor Constantine I but the relics were only discovered in 1127 during demolition work on the predecessor of the present church buildings since which time the abbey has been a major centre of pilgrimage 1 In the 12th century the manuscript now known as Kues 52 an important witness to the Collectaneum of Sedulius Scottus and the Proverbia Grecorum was copied at St Matthias 2 Efforts to reform in the wake of the Council of Basel under Johannes Rode the Carthusian prior appointed by the bishop led to spiritual and economic renewal to the extent that St Matthias became an example for other monasteries In 1433 at the request of Duke Otto of Brunswick John Dederoth having effected notable reforms at Clus Abbey turned his attention to the extremely neglected and dilapidated Bursfelde Abbey He was able to obtain two exemplary monks from St Matthias Abbey to maintain his reformed discipline there In 1458 St Matthias joined the Bursfelde Congregation The eastern part of the crypt was added around 1500 3 A Baroque facade was later added to the lower west front of the church 4 The abbey passed through the Reformation almost unscathed but it was badly affected by wars and looting and also by conflicts with various bishops or abbots The last abbot was relieved of his office as early as 1783 years before the actual dissolution of the abbey and management from then on lay in the hands of the prior nbsp Watercolour of the abbey c 1783 source source church bellsWhen the troubles of the French Revolution spilled over onto German territory the abbey buildings were requisitioned by the French army and monks were obliged to leave the abbey at first with the intention that this was to be a temporary absence living from 1794 to 1802 in the parish house Mattheiser Pfarrhaus In 1802 however the abbey was nationalised and secularised 3 When the premises were sold off the local businessman Christoph Philipp Nell acquired the bulk of the main building complex and used it with little alteration for his residence thus preserving it from the demolition and gross alterations for industrial purposes that befell many other monastic buildings at this period Apart from the main abbey complex there remain particularly in villages along the Moselle many farmhouses and estate buildings which formed the abbey s economic basis before secularisation They are often called Mattheiser Hof Matthias farm or other names making reference to the abbey An especially large farm of this sort was the Roscheider Hof near the village of Merzlich now Konz Karthaus now the Volkskunde und Freilichtmuseum Roscheider Hof Local History and Open air Museum Roscheider Hof where the original building is preserved as one of the exhibits Second foundation edit nbsp St Matthias Abbey from the MariensauleAfter several attempts to revive the monastery in the 19th century monks from Seckau Abbey part of the Beuron Congregation moved into the Mattheiser Pfarrhaus after World War I On 22 October 1922 the main building complex was rededicated as a Benedictine abbey and resettled 3 The new community joined the Beuron Congregation In 1941 the National Socialist government suspended the monastery and the monks moved to Maria Laach Abbey After their return in 1945 there was dissension over the care of the parish of St Matthias which was now independent of the Benedictine order for whom parochial duties with the secure income they provided represented a staple economic resource It was recommended that the monastic community should move to Tholey Abbey in the Saarland a move which split the community between those who were willing to go to Tholey and those who preferred to stay in Trier Those monks who remained in St Matthias became independent of any congregation and remained so until 1981 when they joined the Congregation of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Congregatio Annuntiationis BMV nbsp Cloister southern aisle Since 1991 the abbey has had a close link with Huysburg Priory in Saxony Anhalt refounded in 1972 In September 2004 the two monasteries joined as one community The community devotes itself to the cure of souls in 2007 10 000 Roman Catholics belonged to the parish of St Matthias as well as hospital and pilgrimage duties The community also receives guests and leads ecumenical discussions Individual brothers may also pursue secular occupations such as judge town planner or teacher From 1981 to 2005 Dom Ansgar Schmidt led the community as its abbot until his election as President Abbot of the Congregation Ignatius Maass was elected his successor and nominated Matthias Vogt as his new prior the benediction took place on 22 October 2005 As of 2007 19 monks lived in the abbey Buildings and art editBasilica edit nbsp Nave of the basilicaThe Romanesque St Matthias Basilica which was dedicated on 13 January 1148 combines four functions It is the parish church of the parish of the same name the monastic church of the Benedictine community a pilgrimage church centred on the tomb of Saint Matthias the Apostle and the burial church of the first bishops of Trier Eucharius und Valerius 1 The church building like all such is in a constant state of tension between on the one hand the preservation and care of the structure and on the other the need to meet current demands The basilica has therefore been thoroughly transformed during a long drawn out exercise in cleaning up and alteration The crypt has been extended by a further two bays and provided with new means of access The place of the veneration of Saint Matthias the Apostle as well as the altar space have been adapted to modern requirements Stable choir stalls have been built for the monks choir A lift has been installed for easier access to all levels On 10 December 2007 during a solemn pontifical office with Bishop Reinhard Marx the bones of the Apostle Matthias in their shrine were translated to their final location in the crypt 5 with the solemn dedication of the altar planned for 24 February 2008 The conclusion of the building works with an overhaul of the electrics and a final paint job is not presently possible due to financial constraints nbsp Gnadenkapelle in the northern aisleThe Abbey church is considered a Marian shrine as it contains a Gnadenbild an image of the Blessed Virgin that depicts the pregnant Mary gazing in contemplation at the child she carries Reliquary of the Cross edit In the Chapel of the Cross Kreuzkapelle in the north side tower of the basilica is kept the reliquary of the cross or staurotheca It dates from the 13th century and is made of worked gold in the centre is a golden cross set with precious stones which is said to contain pieces of the True Cross The Chapel of the Cross is accessible on guided tours Mattheiser Venus editThe Mattheiser Venus or Venus of St Matthias was an ancient Roman marble statue of the goddess Venus which was formerly kept at the St Matthias Abbey The statue of the goddess of love was kept on display in chains by the wall of the monastery marked with the following inscription WOLT IHR WISSEN WAS ICH BIN ICH BIN GEWESEN EIN ABGOTTIN DA S EVCHARIVS ZV TRIER KAM ER MICH ZERBRACH MEIN EHR ABNAHM ICH WAR GEEHRET ALS EIN GOTT IETZ STEHEN ICH HIE DER WELT ZV SPOT It was an established custom at the monastery to stone the statue annually to ritually celebrate the victory of Christianity over Paganism by annual desecration of the statue 6 This custom allegedly took place since the Middle Ages but is confirmed since at least 1551 The statue was reduced to rubble but the remains of it was transferred by the French commander of the town to a historical society in 1811 It is now kept at the Rheinisches Landesmuseum Trier 6 nbsp Sculpture of the first three bishops of Trier nbsp Monumental effigy over the Apostle s grave nbsp Frontage at night nbsp Rear view of the abbey nbsp Gate to the cemeteryAbbots incomplete list edit1211 1257 Jakob of Lorraine 1416 1421 Herbrand von Guls 1421 1439 Johannes Rode 1439 1447 Johannes von Vorst 1447 1451 Heinrich Wolff von Sponheim 1451 0 0 0 0 Johannes Donre 1569 1573 Peter von Niederweiss 1599 1612 Johann von Keil 1629 1649 Nikolaus Trinkler 1700 1727 Wilhelm Henn 1727 1758 Modestus Manheim 1758 1773 Adalbert WiltzAfter the refoundation 1922 1938 Laurentius Zeller elected Archabbot of the Brazilian Congregation 1938 1939 1946 Basilius Ebel 1946 1966 Abbot of Maria Laach Abbey 1947 1949 Petrus Borne 1949 1976 Abbot of Tholey Abbey The community split in 1949 one part resettled in Tholey with Abbot Petrus Borne the remainder in Trier belonged to no congregation and was directly subordinate to the Abbot Primate of the Benedictine Order 1963 1969 Laurentius Klein 1969 1981 Athanasius Polag 1981 2005 Ansgar Schmidt since 2004 President of the Congregation of the Annunciation 2005 0 0 0 0 Ignatius MaassRelations to other communities editBenedictine priory on the Huysburg since September 2004 St Matthias Abbey has formed one single community with the brothers of the Huysburg Priory near Halberstadt in Saxony Anhalt St Matthias belongs to the Congregation of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Congregatio Annuntiationis BMV St Scholastica s Abbey Burg Dinklage St Matthias has a long and close relationship with the Benedictine nunnery of St Scholastica s Dinklage Community of the Resurrection Mirfield St Matthias also has a partnership with the Anglican Community of the Resurrection Mirfield in England Delegations from St Matthias visit both Dinklage and Mirfield every year who in turn send every year a delegation to St Matthias Notes edit a b c St Matthias Abbey Trier Tourismus und Marketing Dean Simpson 1987 The Proverbia Grecorum Traditio 43 1 22 doi 10 1017 S0362152900012460 JSTOR 27831196 a b c St Matthias Abbey Religiana St Matthias Abbey Detail of lower half of facade of the abbey church with later Baroque additions Raclin Murphy Museum of Art University of Notre Dame Press release of the Bishop s Vicar general 12 December 2007 accessed 24 March 2008 a b Zur Mattheiser Venus see Kuhnen Hans Peter ed 2001 Das romische Trier Fuhrer zu archaologischen Denkmalern in Deutschland Vol 40 Stuttgart Theiss pp 177f ISBN 3 8062 1517 0 References editSandra Ost Friedhof St Matthias Trier Matergloriosa Verlag 2007 ISBN 978 3 9811323 6 6 German Eduard Sebald St Eucharius St Matthias in Trier DKV Kunstfuhrer 591 Munchen Berlin Deutscher Kunstverlag 20082 ISBN 978 3 422 02158 7 English External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Matthias Trier Official website in German Ralf Arnert Seit 900 Jahren haben Pilger ihre Spuren auf dem geschichtstrachtigen Weg nach Trier hinterlassen article about pilgrimages to Trier in German Congregation of the Annunciation Art history and church organ of St Matthias Basilica in German 49 44 17 N 6 37 55 E 49 73806 N 6 63194 E 49 73806 6 63194 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Matthias 27 Abbey amp oldid 1169294603, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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