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Pannonhalma Archabbey

The Benedictine Pannonhalma Archabbey or Territorial Abbey of Saint Martin on Mount Pannonhalma (lat. Archiabbatia or Abbatia Territorialis Sancti Martini in Monte Pannoniae) is a medieval building in Pannonhalma and is one of the oldest historical monuments in Hungary. Founded in 996, it is located near the town, on top of a hill (282 m). Saint Martin of Tours is believed to have been born at the foot of this hill, hence its former name, Mount of Saint Martin (Hungarian: Márton-hegy), from which the monastery occasionally took the alternative name of Márton-hegyi Apátság. This is the second largest territorial abbey in the world, after the one in Monte Cassino.

Millenary Benedictine Abbey of Pannonhalma and its Natural Environment
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Pannonhalma Archabbey
LocationPannonhalma, Győr-Moson-Sopron County, Western Transdanubia, Transdanubia, Hungary
CriteriaCultural: (iv), (vi)
Reference758
Inscription1996 (20th Session)
Area47.4 ha (117 acres)
Buffer zone758 ha (1,870 acres)
Websitehttps://bences.hu/lang/en/
Coordinates47°33′10″N 17°45′40″E / 47.55278°N 17.76111°E / 47.55278; 17.76111
Location of Pannonhalma Archabbey in Hungary

Its sights include the Basilica with the Crypt (built in the 13th century), the Cloisters, the monumental Library with 360,000 volumes, the Baroque Refectory (with several examples of trompe-l'œil) and the Archabbey Collection (the second biggest in the country). Because of the exceptional architectural evolution of the abbey over its 1000-year history and its historical importance as an international cultural and religious center, the abbey and its surroundings were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1996.[1]

Today there are about 50 monks living in the monastery. The abbey is supplemented by the Benedictine High School, a boys' boarding school.

History edit

It was founded as the first Hungarian Benedictine monastery in 996 by Prince Géza, who designated this as a place for the monks to settle, and then it soon became the centre of the Benedictine order. The monastery was built in honour of Saint Martin of Tours. Géza's son, King Stephen I donated estates and privileges to the monastery. Astrik (Anastasius) served as its first abbot.

The oldest surviving document to use the Hungarian language, the Charter of the Tihany Benedictine Abbey, dating back to 1055, is still preserved in the library. In 1096, on his way to the holy lands as leader of one of three crusader armies, Duke Godfrey of Bouillon spent a week here negotiating his army's safe passage through Hungary from king Coloman. The first buildings of the community were destroyed in 1137, then rebuilt. The Basilica's pillars and the early Gothic vault were built in the early 13th century, using the walls of the former church. In 1486, the abbey was reconstructed under King Matthias in the Gothic style.

The monastery became an archabbey in 1541, and as a result of Ottoman incursions into Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries it was fortified. During one and a half centuries of the occupation of Hungary by the Ottoman Empire, the monks had to abandon the abbey for varying amounts of time. Only later were they able to start the reconstruction of the damaged buildings. During the time of Archabbot Benedek Sajghó (1722-1768), a major baroque construction was in progress in the monastery.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, rich Baroque adornments and extensions were added to the complex and much of its current facade dates from this time. It received its present form in 1832, with the library and the tower, which was built in classicist style. The 18th century, the era of the Enlightenment also influenced the life of the monasteries. The state and the monarchs judged the operation of the communities according to immediate utility, by and large tolerating only those orders which practised nursing and education. In the 1860s, Ferenc Storno organised major renovations, mostly in the basilica.

After 1945, Hungary became a communist state, and in 1950, the properties of the Order and the schools run by the Benedictines were confiscated by the state, not to be returned until after the end of communism in Hungary. In 1995, one year before the millennium, the complex was entirely reconstructed and renovated. In 1996, "the Millenary Benedictine Abbey of Pannonhalma and its Natural Environment" was elected among the World Heritage sites.

List of abbots edit

Abbots from 997 to the present
    • Asztrik 997-1015
    • Rasia 1015-b. 1029
    • St Maurus b. 1029-1036
    • ... 10??-1091
    • Péter 1091-1103
    • ... 1103-1124
    • Deda 1124-1131
    • Dávid 1131-1150
    • Rafael 1151-1175
    • Rajnald 1175-1180
    • Simili 1180-1189
    • Péter 1189-1192
    • Bálazs 1192-1198
    • János 1198-1201
    • ... 1201-1207
    • Uros 1207-1241
    • ... 1241-1249
    • Salamon 1249-1252
    • Favus 1252-1262
    • Bonifác 1263-1288
    • Herman 1288-1300
    • Miklós I 1300-1306
    • Imre(Henrik) 1306-1307
    • Jakab 1307-1308
    • János 1308-1309
    • László 1309-1311
    • Miklós II 1312-1318
    • Miklós III 1319-1333
    • Hammer Vilmos 1333-1354
    • Szigfrid 1355-1365
    • László Czudar 1365-1372
    • Domonkos 1372-1377
    • László Piaszt der Weiße 1377-1379
    • István 1380-1398
    • Miklós Ferenc Marczali Dózsa 1399-1404
    • János Albeni 1404-1406
    • Konrád Ovári 1406-1408
    • János Kropidló 1408-1421
    • Miklós Dobói 1422-1438
    • László Héderváry 1439-1447
    • Tamás Döbrentei 1447-1467
    • János Vitéz 1467-1472
    • Mátyás Király 1472-1490
    • Tamás Bakóc 1490-1492
    • László Király 1493-1500
    • Mátyás Tolnai 1500-1535
    • Mihály Giöry 1535-1542
    • Ferenc Bedegi Nyáry 1543-1547
    • János Csanády 1548-1556
    • László Martonfalvi 1556-1562
    • Péter Bocsi Thorday 1563-1566
    • István Fejérkövy 1567-1593
    • ... 1593-1638
    • Mátyás Pálffy 1638-1646
    • Placid Magger 1647-1667
    • ... 1667-1689
    • Placid Lendvay 1689-1699
    • Egyed Karner 1699-1708
    • ... 1708-1722
    • Benedek Sajghó 1722-1768
    • Sámuel Vajda 1768-1795
    • Dániel Somogyi 1795-1801
    • ... 1801-1829
    • Mór Czinár 1829-1841
    • Mihály Rimely 1842-1865
    • Krizosztom Károly Kruesz 1865-1885
    • ... 1885-1892
    • Lipót Fehér 1892-1910
    • Tibor Hajdu 1910-1918
    • ... 1918-1920
    • Remig Bárdos 1920-1932
    • Krizosztom Ferenc Kelemen 1933-1950
    • Pál Sárközy 1951-1957
    • Norbert Béla Legányi 1957-1969
    • ... 1969-1973
    • András Szennay 1973-1991
    • Asztrik Várszegi 1991-2018
    • Tamás Cirill Hortobágyi 2018-

Events edit

Pannonhalma was visited, among others, by Alexius II, Patriarch of Moscow in 1994, Pope John Paul II in 1996 and Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople and the Dalai Lama in 2000. In 2005, a film was made about the archabbot, Asztrik Várszegi, titled A közvetítő ("The mediator"). Stéphanie, Crown Princess of Austria died here and her remains were interred here in 1945.

In July 2011, the heart of former Crown Prince of Austria and Hungary Otto von Habsburg was buried in Pannonhalma Archabbey.[2]

The building complex edit

Basilica and crypt edit

The present church of Pannonhalma, a crowning achievement of the early Gothic style, was built at the beginning of the 13th century during the reign of Abbot Uros, and was consecrated most likely in 1224. Recent archaeological findings under the floor level of the west end of the basilica date from the 11th century. The oldest segment currently seen in the basilica is the wall of the southern aisle. Dating from the 12th century, it is a remnant of the second church to stand on the site, consecrated in 1137 during the reign of Abbot Dávid.

During the archaeological excavations two walled-up gates were found in the sacristy. One of these could have presumably been the northern entrance of Abbot Dávid's church, while the other that of Abbot Uros'. Also found under the floor between the front altar and the sanctuary steps was a grave, most likely that of Abbot Uros.

The church was extended during the reign of King Matthias, in which the present-day ceiling of the sanctuary, the eastern ends of the aisles and the Saint Benedict chapel were completed. During the Turkish occupation the furnishings were entirely destroyed. The most significant renovation after the occupation started in the 1720s, under Archabbot Benedek Sajghó. Ferenc Storno was the last to undertake a major renovation of the church in the 1860s. At this time the main altar, the pulpit, the frescoes of the ceiling, and the upper-level stained glass window depicting Saint Martin were added.

Porta Speciosa and the cloister edit

In the Middle Ages one of the main entrances to the church was the Porta Speciosa (ornate entrance). This portal leads to the church from the cloister (quadrum or quadratura) and it was crafted also in the 13th century. In the Renaissance Pannonhalma was rather depopulated (with not more than 6 or 7 monks). Under King Matthias' rule, in 1472, today's cloister was created. The constructions were probably finished in 1486, as it is testified by the inscription on one of the cornerstones. The work was presumably conducted by craftsmen of the Visegrád Royal Workshop of Construction.

The small inner garden surrounded by the cloister was also called Paradisum (Paradise) metaphorically creating an earthly imitation of Biblical Paradise. In medieval times mainly herbs were grown here so that those in need would recover the body in its wholeness and health as it was in Paradise.

Library edit

The library was finished in the first third of the 19th century. The longitudinal part of the building was planned and built by Ferenc Engel in the 1820s. Later János Packh was commissioned with extending the edifice, and the oval hall is his work. Joseph Klieber, a Vienna master was asked to ornament the interior of the building.

On the four sides of the oval hall's ceiling the allegories of the four medieval university faculties can be seen: Law, Theology, Medicine and the Arts. The holdings of the library have been increasing ever since. Manuscripts from the time of Saint László have been catalogued in Pannonhalma. As of today, 360,000 volumes are kept in the collection.

Baroque refectory edit

In the 18th century Archabbot Benedek Sajghó (1722–1768) had the Carmelite brother Atanáz Márton Witwer design the baroque elements of the monastery. The construction of the two-story high, rectangular shaped hall with cavetto vault probably dates to the second half of the 1720s. The paintings (secco) on the walls were created between 1728 and 1730 by Davide Antonio Fossati, a Swiss artist who later settled in Venice. The secco on the ceiling depicts the apotheosis of King Saint Stephen. The six well-known Biblical scenes on the side-walls are thematically connected to eating: the offering of vinegar to Christ on the Cross; the temptation of Jesus in the desert; Daniel in the lions' lair; the feast of King Balthasar; the decapitation of Saint John, the Baptist; and a scene from the life of Saint Benedict.

The Millennium Monument edit

 
Millennium Monument (on the left)

In order to celebrate the millennium of the Magyars' settlement in 896, seven monuments were erected in the Carpathian Mountain Basin in 1896. One of them can still be seen today in Pannonhalma. The edifice was originally covered by a 26-metre high, double-shell dome with a colossal brass relief on it representing the Hungarian royal crown. Due to its deterioration, however, the outer shell had to be dismantled in 1937–1938, and the building took its present form. Two windows shed light on the interior, a circular, undivided room covered by a low dome (i.e. the original inner shell). The unfinished fresco decorating the eastern wall is an allegorical vision of the Foundation of the Hungarian state and was painted by Vilmos Aba-Novák in 1938.

Our Lady Chapel edit

The construction of the Our Lady Chapel began in 1714. Originally it was a place of worship for the non-native population living in the vicinity of the abbey. The chapel, with its three baroque altars and small, 18th-century organ, was renovated in 1865, at which time the romantic ornamentation of the walls and the portal took place. The crypt beneath the church has served as the burial place of the monks for centuries. Near the Chapel stands a look-out tower from wood.

Arboretum (Botanical Garden) edit

In 1830 as many as 80 tree and bush species were to be found on the Archabbey's lands. It was through the design of Fábián Szeder in the 1840s that the current form of the arboretum took shape. Today the arboretum has more than 400 tree and bush species, many of which are rare species and varieties in Hungary.

Present uses edit

Archives edit

The Pannonhalma Archives of the Benedictine Archabbey contains one of the richest and most valuable collections of documents from the first centuries of Hungarian statehood. It includes the monastery's interpolated charter (1001–1002) from Saint Stephen, the founding charter of the Tihany Abbey (1055), the first known written text to include Hungarian words and phrases. The records of the medieval Pannonhalma, a monastery with the rights to issue official documents (locus authenticus), and the records of the Bakonybél, the Tihany and the Dömölk abbeys constitute separate entities. The archive collects documents from the archabbot's office, the Theological School and the former Teacher Training School of the order, the former and current secondary schools, the dependent Benedictine houses, the finance offices of the Archabbey, and from the documentation of the parishes that belong to the so-called Territorial Abbey: a quasi-diocese under the authority of the Archabbey. Partially as deposit, partially as inheritance, the archives of the Guary, the Somogyi, the Chernel, the Kende, the Erdődy and the Lónyay families came into the collection. The amount of the archive's holdings is 192 running metres.

Szent Gellért College of Theology edit

There is a College of Theology functioning in the archabbey, named after Saint Gerard of Csanád.

High school edit

Winery edit

Wine making started in the Pannonhalma-Sokoróalja region when Benedictine monks founded the monastery of Pannonhalma in 996. Social and political turmoil following World War II made it impossible to continue the centuries-old traditions, since both the properties and the winery were taken over by the Communist state. In the ensuing decades, monks living in Pannonhalma did not give up hope of resuscitating their wine-making traditions. Since the fall of Communism, the monks have revived the viticultural traditions and the wineries. In 2000, the abbey repurchased vineyards that had been confiscated by the Communists and began replanting grape vines in the same year. The winery is situated on a 2000 m2 plot with a capacity of 3000 hls. The main grape varieties are Rhine Riesling, Sauvignon blanc, Gewürztraminer, Welschriesling, Ezerjó and Sárfehér. In addition, they have planted the more international Chardonnay, Pinot blanc, Pinot noir, Merlot and Cabernet Franc. They currently have 37 hectares under newly planted vines and the first harvest took place in autumn 2003.

Surroundings edit

Around the monastery one can find the following:

  • Way of the Cross (Baroque, 1724)
  • Blessed Maurice Lookout Tower in the woods nearby

See also edit

Further settlements of the Benedictine Order in Hungary are: Győr, Tihany, Bakonybél, Budapest.

Sources edit

  • Csóka G., Szovák K., Takács I. (2000): Pannonhalma - Képes kalauz a bencés Főapátság történetéhez és nevezetességeihez. (Guide to Pannonhalma Archabbey: history and sightseeings). Pannonhalmi Főapátság, Pannonhalma
  • Hapák J. (2000): Pannonhalma. Magyar Könyvklub, Pannonhalmi Főapátság (ISBN 963 547 158 0)
  • Hapák J., Sólymos Sz. (2008): Pannonhalma. Kossuth Könyvkiadó, Pannonhalmi Főapátság (ISBN 978-963-09-5750-2)
  • Gerevich T. (1938): Magyarország románkori emlékei. (Die romanische Denkmäler Ungarns.) Egyetemi nyomda. Budapest
  • Szőnyi O. (É.n.): Régi magyar templomok. Alte Ungarische Kirchen. Anciennes églises Hongroises. Hungarian Churches of Yore. A Műemlékek Országos Bizottsága. Mirályi Magyar Egyetemi Nyomda, Budapest
  • Henszlmann, I. (1876): Magyarország ó-keresztyén, román és átmeneti stylü mű-emlékeinek rövid ismertetése, (Old-Christian, Romanesque and Transitional Style Architecture in Hungary). Királyi Magyar Egyetemi Nyomda, Budapest
  • Genthon I. (1959): Magyarország műemlékei. (Architectural Heritage of Hungary). Budapest

References edit

  1. ^ "Millenary Benedictine Abbey of Pannonhalma and its Natural Environment". UNESCO World Heritage Convention. United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  2. ^ Scally, Derek (4 July 2011). "Death of former 'kaiser inm exile' and last heir to Austro-Hungarian throne". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2011-07-05.

External links edit

  • Archabbey of Pannonhalma
  • Millenary Benedictine Abbey of Pannonhalma and its Natural Environment UNESCO Collection on Google Arts and Culture
  • Catholic Encyclopedia entry
  • UNESCO description
  • Pannonhalma, letter of privileges of Pannonhalma (The Vazul-line: Kings of the Árpád dynasty after St. Stephen (1038—1301))

pannonhalma, archabbey, benedictine, territorial, abbey, saint, martin, mount, pannonhalma, archiabbatia, abbatia, territorialis, sancti, martini, monte, pannoniae, medieval, building, pannonhalma, oldest, historical, monuments, hungary, founded, located, near. The Benedictine Pannonhalma Archabbey or Territorial Abbey of Saint Martin on Mount Pannonhalma lat Archiabbatia or Abbatia Territorialis Sancti Martini in Monte Pannoniae is a medieval building in Pannonhalma and is one of the oldest historical monuments in Hungary Founded in 996 it is located near the town on top of a hill 282 m Saint Martin of Tours is believed to have been born at the foot of this hill hence its former name Mount of Saint Martin Hungarian Marton hegy from which the monastery occasionally took the alternative name of Marton hegyi Apatsag This is the second largest territorial abbey in the world after the one in Monte Cassino Millenary Benedictine Abbey of Pannonhalma and its Natural EnvironmentUNESCO World Heritage SitePannonhalma ArchabbeyLocationPannonhalma Gyor Moson Sopron County Western Transdanubia Transdanubia HungaryCriteriaCultural iv vi Reference758Inscription1996 20th Session Area47 4 ha 117 acres Buffer zone758 ha 1 870 acres Websitehttps bences hu lang en Coordinates47 33 10 N 17 45 40 E 47 55278 N 17 76111 E 47 55278 17 76111Location of Pannonhalma Archabbey in Hungary Its sights include the Basilica with the Crypt built in the 13th century the Cloisters the monumental Library with 360 000 volumes the Baroque Refectory with several examples of trompe l œil and the Archabbey Collection the second biggest in the country Because of the exceptional architectural evolution of the abbey over its 1000 year history and its historical importance as an international cultural and religious center the abbey and its surroundings were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1996 1 Today there are about 50 monks living in the monastery The abbey is supplemented by the Benedictine High School a boys boarding school Contents 1 History 1 1 List of abbots 1 2 Events 2 The building complex 2 1 Basilica and crypt 2 2 Porta Speciosa and the cloister 2 3 Library 2 4 Baroque refectory 2 5 The Millennium Monument 2 6 Our Lady Chapel 2 7 Arboretum Botanical Garden 3 Present uses 3 1 Archives 3 2 Szent Gellert College of Theology 3 3 High school 3 4 Winery 4 Surroundings 5 See also 6 Sources 7 References 8 External linksHistory editIt was founded as the first Hungarian Benedictine monastery in 996 by Prince Geza who designated this as a place for the monks to settle and then it soon became the centre of the Benedictine order The monastery was built in honour of Saint Martin of Tours Geza s son King Stephen I donated estates and privileges to the monastery Astrik Anastasius served as its first abbot The oldest surviving document to use the Hungarian language the Charter of the Tihany Benedictine Abbey dating back to 1055 is still preserved in the library In 1096 on his way to the holy lands as leader of one of three crusader armies Duke Godfrey of Bouillon spent a week here negotiating his army s safe passage through Hungary from king Coloman The first buildings of the community were destroyed in 1137 then rebuilt The Basilica s pillars and the early Gothic vault were built in the early 13th century using the walls of the former church In 1486 the abbey was reconstructed under King Matthias in the Gothic style The monastery became an archabbey in 1541 and as a result of Ottoman incursions into Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries it was fortified During one and a half centuries of the occupation of Hungary by the Ottoman Empire the monks had to abandon the abbey for varying amounts of time Only later were they able to start the reconstruction of the damaged buildings During the time of Archabbot Benedek Sajgho 1722 1768 a major baroque construction was in progress in the monastery In the 17th and 18th centuries rich Baroque adornments and extensions were added to the complex and much of its current facade dates from this time It received its present form in 1832 with the library and the tower which was built in classicist style The 18th century the era of the Enlightenment also influenced the life of the monasteries The state and the monarchs judged the operation of the communities according to immediate utility by and large tolerating only those orders which practised nursing and education In the 1860s Ferenc Storno organised major renovations mostly in the basilica After 1945 Hungary became a communist state and in 1950 the properties of the Order and the schools run by the Benedictines were confiscated by the state not to be returned until after the end of communism in Hungary In 1995 one year before the millennium the complex was entirely reconstructed and renovated In 1996 the Millenary Benedictine Abbey of Pannonhalma and its Natural Environment was elected among the World Heritage sites List of abbots edit Abbots from 997 to the present Asztrik 997 1015 Rasia 1015 b 1029 St Maurus b 1029 1036 10 1091 Peter 1091 1103 1103 1124 Deda 1124 1131 David 1131 1150 Rafael 1151 1175 Rajnald 1175 1180 Simili 1180 1189 Peter 1189 1192 Balazs 1192 1198 Janos 1198 1201 1201 1207 Uros 1207 1241 1241 1249 Salamon 1249 1252 Favus 1252 1262 Bonifac 1263 1288 Herman 1288 1300 Miklos I 1300 1306 Imre Henrik 1306 1307 Jakab 1307 1308 Janos 1308 1309 Laszlo 1309 1311 Miklos II 1312 1318 Miklos III 1319 1333 Hammer Vilmos 1333 1354 Szigfrid 1355 1365 Laszlo Czudar 1365 1372 Domonkos 1372 1377 Laszlo Piaszt der Weisse 1377 1379 Istvan 1380 1398 Miklos Ferenc Marczali Dozsa 1399 1404 Janos Albeni 1404 1406 Konrad Ovari 1406 1408 Janos Kropidlo 1408 1421 Miklos Doboi 1422 1438 Laszlo Hedervary 1439 1447 Tamas Dobrentei 1447 1467 Janos Vitez 1467 1472 Matyas Kiraly 1472 1490 Tamas Bakoc 1490 1492 Laszlo Kiraly 1493 1500 Matyas Tolnai 1500 1535 Mihaly Giory 1535 1542 Ferenc Bedegi Nyary 1543 1547 Janos Csanady 1548 1556 Laszlo Martonfalvi 1556 1562 Peter Bocsi Thorday 1563 1566 Istvan Fejerkovy 1567 1593 1593 1638 Matyas Palffy 1638 1646 Placid Magger 1647 1667 1667 1689 Placid Lendvay 1689 1699 Egyed Karner 1699 1708 1708 1722 Benedek Sajgho 1722 1768 Samuel Vajda 1768 1795 Daniel Somogyi 1795 1801 1801 1829 Mor Czinar 1829 1841 Mihaly Rimely 1842 1865 Krizosztom Karoly Kruesz 1865 1885 1885 1892 Lipot Feher 1892 1910 Tibor Hajdu 1910 1918 1918 1920 Remig Bardos 1920 1932 Krizosztom Ferenc Kelemen 1933 1950 Pal Sarkozy 1951 1957 Norbert Bela Leganyi 1957 1969 1969 1973 Andras Szennay 1973 1991 Asztrik Varszegi 1991 2018 Tamas Cirill Hortobagyi 2018 Events edit Pannonhalma was visited among others by Alexius II Patriarch of Moscow in 1994 Pope John Paul II in 1996 and Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople and the Dalai Lama in 2000 In 2005 a film was made about the archabbot Asztrik Varszegi titled A kozvetito The mediator Stephanie Crown Princess of Austria died here and her remains were interred here in 1945 In July 2011 the heart of former Crown Prince of Austria and Hungary Otto von Habsburg was buried in Pannonhalma Archabbey 2 The building complex editBasilica and crypt edit The present church of Pannonhalma a crowning achievement of the early Gothic style was built at the beginning of the 13th century during the reign of Abbot Uros and was consecrated most likely in 1224 Recent archaeological findings under the floor level of the west end of the basilica date from the 11th century The oldest segment currently seen in the basilica is the wall of the southern aisle Dating from the 12th century it is a remnant of the second church to stand on the site consecrated in 1137 during the reign of Abbot David During the archaeological excavations two walled up gates were found in the sacristy One of these could have presumably been the northern entrance of Abbot David s church while the other that of Abbot Uros Also found under the floor between the front altar and the sanctuary steps was a grave most likely that of Abbot Uros The church was extended during the reign of King Matthias in which the present day ceiling of the sanctuary the eastern ends of the aisles and the Saint Benedict chapel were completed During the Turkish occupation the furnishings were entirely destroyed The most significant renovation after the occupation started in the 1720s under Archabbot Benedek Sajgho Ferenc Storno was the last to undertake a major renovation of the church in the 1860s At this time the main altar the pulpit the frescoes of the ceiling and the upper level stained glass window depicting Saint Martin were added Porta Speciosa and the cloister edit In the Middle Ages one of the main entrances to the church was the Porta Speciosa ornate entrance This portal leads to the church from the cloister quadrum or quadratura and it was crafted also in the 13th century In the Renaissance Pannonhalma was rather depopulated with not more than 6 or 7 monks Under King Matthias rule in 1472 today s cloister was created The constructions were probably finished in 1486 as it is testified by the inscription on one of the cornerstones The work was presumably conducted by craftsmen of the Visegrad Royal Workshop of Construction The small inner garden surrounded by the cloister was also called Paradisum Paradise metaphorically creating an earthly imitation of Biblical Paradise In medieval times mainly herbs were grown here so that those in need would recover the body in its wholeness and health as it was in Paradise Library edit The library was finished in the first third of the 19th century The longitudinal part of the building was planned and built by Ferenc Engel in the 1820s Later Janos Packh was commissioned with extending the edifice and the oval hall is his work Joseph Klieber a Vienna master was asked to ornament the interior of the building On the four sides of the oval hall s ceiling the allegories of the four medieval university faculties can be seen Law Theology Medicine and the Arts The holdings of the library have been increasing ever since Manuscripts from the time of Saint Laszlo have been catalogued in Pannonhalma As of today 360 000 volumes are kept in the collection Baroque refectory edit In the 18th century Archabbot Benedek Sajgho 1722 1768 had the Carmelite brother Atanaz Marton Witwer design the baroque elements of the monastery The construction of the two story high rectangular shaped hall with cavetto vault probably dates to the second half of the 1720s The paintings secco on the walls were created between 1728 and 1730 by Davide Antonio Fossati a Swiss artist who later settled in Venice The secco on the ceiling depicts the apotheosis of King Saint Stephen The six well known Biblical scenes on the side walls are thematically connected to eating the offering of vinegar to Christ on the Cross the temptation of Jesus in the desert Daniel in the lions lair the feast of King Balthasar the decapitation of Saint John the Baptist and a scene from the life of Saint Benedict The Millennium Monument edit nbsp Millennium Monument on the left In order to celebrate the millennium of the Magyars settlement in 896 seven monuments were erected in the Carpathian Mountain Basin in 1896 One of them can still be seen today in Pannonhalma The edifice was originally covered by a 26 metre high double shell dome with a colossal brass relief on it representing the Hungarian royal crown Due to its deterioration however the outer shell had to be dismantled in 1937 1938 and the building took its present form Two windows shed light on the interior a circular undivided room covered by a low dome i e the original inner shell The unfinished fresco decorating the eastern wall is an allegorical vision of the Foundation of the Hungarian state and was painted by Vilmos Aba Novak in 1938 Our Lady Chapel edit The construction of the Our Lady Chapel began in 1714 Originally it was a place of worship for the non native population living in the vicinity of the abbey The chapel with its three baroque altars and small 18th century organ was renovated in 1865 at which time the romantic ornamentation of the walls and the portal took place The crypt beneath the church has served as the burial place of the monks for centuries Near the Chapel stands a look out tower from wood Arboretum Botanical Garden edit In 1830 as many as 80 tree and bush species were to be found on the Archabbey s lands It was through the design of Fabian Szeder in the 1840s that the current form of the arboretum took shape Today the arboretum has more than 400 tree and bush species many of which are rare species and varieties in Hungary Present uses editArchives edit The Pannonhalma Archives of the Benedictine Archabbey contains one of the richest and most valuable collections of documents from the first centuries of Hungarian statehood It includes the monastery s interpolated charter 1001 1002 from Saint Stephen the founding charter of the Tihany Abbey 1055 the first known written text to include Hungarian words and phrases The records of the medieval Pannonhalma a monastery with the rights to issue official documents locus authenticus and the records of the Bakonybel the Tihany and the Domolk abbeys constitute separate entities The archive collects documents from the archabbot s office the Theological School and the former Teacher Training School of the order the former and current secondary schools the dependent Benedictine houses the finance offices of the Archabbey and from the documentation of the parishes that belong to the so called Territorial Abbey a quasi diocese under the authority of the Archabbey Partially as deposit partially as inheritance the archives of the Guary the Somogyi the Chernel the Kende the Erdody and the Lonyay families came into the collection The amount of the archive s holdings is 192 running metres Szent Gellert College of Theology edit There is a College of Theology functioning in the archabbey named after Saint Gerard of Csanad High school edit Further information Benedictine High School of Pannonhalma Winery edit Wine making started in the Pannonhalma Sokoroalja region when Benedictine monks founded the monastery of Pannonhalma in 996 Social and political turmoil following World War II made it impossible to continue the centuries old traditions since both the properties and the winery were taken over by the Communist state In the ensuing decades monks living in Pannonhalma did not give up hope of resuscitating their wine making traditions Since the fall of Communism the monks have revived the viticultural traditions and the wineries In 2000 the abbey repurchased vineyards that had been confiscated by the Communists and began replanting grape vines in the same year The winery is situated on a 2000 m2 plot with a capacity of 3000 hls The main grape varieties are Rhine Riesling Sauvignon blanc Gewurztraminer Welschriesling Ezerjo and Sarfeher In addition they have planted the more international Chardonnay Pinot blanc Pinot noir Merlot and Cabernet Franc They currently have 37 hectares under newly planted vines and the first harvest took place in autumn 2003 Surroundings editAround the monastery one can find the following Way of the Cross Baroque 1724 Blessed Maurice Lookout Tower in the woods nearbySee also editFurther settlements of the Benedictine Order in Hungary are Gyor Tihany Bakonybel Budapest Roman Catholicism in Hungary List of cathedrals in HungarySources editCsoka G Szovak K Takacs I 2000 Pannonhalma Kepes kalauz a bences Foapatsag tortenetehez es nevezetessegeihez Guide to Pannonhalma Archabbey history and sightseeings Pannonhalmi Foapatsag Pannonhalma Hapak J 2000 Pannonhalma Magyar Konyvklub Pannonhalmi Foapatsag ISBN 963 547 158 0 Hapak J Solymos Sz 2008 Pannonhalma Kossuth Konyvkiado Pannonhalmi Foapatsag ISBN 978 963 09 5750 2 Gerevich T 1938 Magyarorszag romankori emlekei Die romanische Denkmaler Ungarns Egyetemi nyomda Budapest Szonyi O E n Regi magyar templomok Alte Ungarische Kirchen Anciennes eglises Hongroises Hungarian Churches of Yore A Muemlekek Orszagos Bizottsaga Miralyi Magyar Egyetemi Nyomda Budapest Henszlmann I 1876 Magyarorszag o keresztyen roman es atmeneti stylu mu emlekeinek rovid ismertetese Old Christian Romanesque and Transitional Style Architecture in Hungary Kiralyi Magyar Egyetemi Nyomda Budapest Genthon I 1959 Magyarorszag muemlekei Architectural Heritage of Hungary BudapestReferences edit Millenary Benedictine Abbey of Pannonhalma and its Natural Environment UNESCO World Heritage Convention United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 29 April 2023 Scally Derek 4 July 2011 Death of former kaiser inm exile and last heir to Austro Hungarian throne The Irish Times Retrieved 2011 07 05 External links editArchabbey of Pannonhalma Millenary Benedictine Abbey of Pannonhalma and its Natural Environment UNESCO Collection on Google Arts and Culture Catholic Encyclopedia entry UNESCO description Pannonhalma letter of privileges of Pannonhalma The Vazul line Kings of the Arpad dynasty after St Stephen 1038 1301 Abbey Winery Pannonhalma Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pannonhalma Archabbey amp oldid 1218537677, 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