Medingen Abbey

Medingen Convent
Medingen Convent St. Maurice
Medingen Convent
Location of Convent Medingen in Lower Saxony, Germany
Coordinates: 53°05′26″N 10°33′55″E / 53.090601°N 10.565176°E / 53.090601; 10.565176
Location Medingen, Lower Saxony
Country Germany
Denomination Protestant Lutheran
Previous denomination Catholic
Website www.kloster-medingen.de
History
Founded 1241
Architecture
Status Convent
Functional status Active

Medingen Abbey or Medingen Convent (German: Kloster Medingen) is a former Cistercian nunnery. Today it is a residence for women of the Protestant Lutheran faith (German: Damenstift) near the Lower Saxon town of Bad Bevensen and is managed by the Monastic Chamber of Hanover (Klosterkammer Hannover).

History

first panel of a cycle of 15 painted wooden boards
Lay brother Johann receiving the divine order to build a new convent, reproduced by Johann Ludolf Lyssmann, 1772 (original art work produced in 1499)

A founding legend ascribes the convent's origins to a lay brother called Johannes; the convent's history from its founding to the election of abbess Margaretha Puffen was formerly depicted in a cycle of 15 painted wooden boards, that were destroyed in the fire of 1781; the only surviving copy is the affix in Johann Ludolf Lyßman's Historische Nachrichten (1772).[1] The legend has it that Johannes claimed divine guidance in his quest to build the new convent. The community was founded 1228 in Restorf am Höhbeck by Johannes and four nuns who joined him in Magdeburg, but the group did not stay there. For unknown reasons, they moved on to Plate near Lüchow and later Bohndorf, before they eventually settled in Altenmedingen, where the first buildings were consecrated on 24 August 1241.[2]

The military road passing through the convent yard presented an ever-present danger of attacks or arson, so the convent decided to move one last time, to the village of Zellensen, today's Medingen. The new church was consecrated on 24 August 1336.[3]

1479 saw the advent of the convent reforms under the influence of the devotio moderna. Many convents at that time did not follow the Cistercian rule very strictly; nuns were allowed to keep their belongings and keep in touch with their relatives once they joined the convent. The Cistercian order was re-established and the prioress Margarete Puffen was made an abbess in 1494.[4] After the reforms, a scriptorium became one of the focal points of the convent and to this day a large number of manuscripts found worldwide can be attributed to the sixteenth-century nuns of Medingen. Hymns (Leisen) noted down in these texts are still part of both Catholic and Protestant hymnbooks today, e.g. in the current German Protestant hymnal Evangelisches Gesangbuch EG 23 "Gelobet seist du, Jesu Christ", EG 100 "Wir wollen alle fröhlich sein" and EG 214 "Gott sei gelobet und gebenedeiet", even though they were wrongly dated to the 14th century by the music historian Walther Lipphardt.[5]

fourteenth panel of a cycle of 15 painted wooden boards
Panel depicting some of the changes in Medingen after the 1479 convent reforms – joint meals where the youngest nun read from the manuscripts, reproduced by Johann Ludolf Lyssmann, 1772 (original art work produced in 1499)

The Reformation attempted to be introduced in Medingen in 1524, was met with resistance from the nuns. They hid their confessor in the attic, publicly burned the Lutheran bible and almost faced the dissolution of the convent. In 1541, the Uelzen Landtag decided to ensure the economic security of Medingen and the five other convents nearby. This was in the nobility's interests, because their unmarried daughters could benefit from the livelihood and education befitting their status. In 1542, all of the convent's goods and earnings were confiscated and contact between the nuns and their family was prohibited. The abbess, Margareta von Stöterogge, did not give in to the demands of bringing all remaining property to Celle, but rather went to Hildesheim for two years, taking the convent's archive and valuables with her. It took her brother, Nikolaus von Stöterogge, the Mayor of Lüneburg, ten years to convince her to return. Eventually, in 1554, the convent became Protestant and from then on, the Klosterordnung (convent order) was defined by the Landesherr or territorial lord.[6]

After the Reformation had been introduced, life changed drastically: The incumbents were now allowed to marry, but had to leave the convent when they did so. In 1605, they replaced the traditional Cistercian habit with an attire in accordance with the convent order introduced by Duke William in 1574. The Thirty Years' War left its mark on the convent and its surrounding area. A new convent order was introduced by Kurfürst (elector) George Louis in 1706.[7]

Most of the convent buildings were destroyed in a fire in January 1781, although valuable possessions like the archives and the abbesses' crosier from 1494 were able to be salvaged. The ruins were demolished in 1782 and the convent re-built in the early neoclassic style. Completed in 1788, the new buildings were consecrated on 24 August.[8]

List of heads of convent

List of provosts
NameFromUntil
Helmerich1236?1240
Nikolaus I12411249
Johannes12611261
Nikolaus II12611286
Hartwig von der Sülze12861306
Christian1306resigned 1326
Ludolf von Lüneburg13261355
Dietrich Bromes13551358
Dietrich von Langlingen13591370
Johannes Ostermann13701380
Dietrich Brand (von Melle?)13801396
Johannes Meyer13961416
Lüdiger Tolner1416resigned 1446
Ludolf Lützken14461464
Dr iur utr Johannes Mahler14641467
Tilemann von Bavenstedt14671494
Ulrich von Bülow14941516
Johann von Mahrenholtz15161516
Bruno von Alten15161518
Johann von Mahrenholtz15181529
List of prioresses
NameFromUntil
Imma I12631284
Imma II12841315
Imma (Irmgard) III13151323
Imma IV Ruffen13231332
Wigburg13271327
Mechthild I von Meding13331343
Elisabeth I von Bernowe13441366
Alburg von dem Sande 13681371
Elisabeth II13761379
Elisabeth III13791399
Druda von Dageförde13991428
Mechthild II Semmelbecker14281435
Caecilia von dem Berge14351445
Elisabeth IV Langendorf14451464
Mechthild III von Römstedt14641479
Margaretha I Puffen14791494, later abbess
List of abbesses
NameFromUntilDenomination
Margaretha I Puffen1494, former prioress1513Catholic
Elisabeth I von Elvern15131524Catholic
Margaretha II Stöterogge15241567Catholic
Getrud I von Töbing15671588Protestant Lutheran
Elisabeth II von Töbing15881630Protestant Lutheran
Anna I von Sarstedt16301635Protestant Lutheran
Margaretha III von Dassel16361667Protestant Lutheran
Margaretha IV von Dassel16671680Protestant Lutheran
Catharina Prigge16811706Protestant Lutheran
Clara Anna von Lüneburg17071719Protestant Lutheran
Anna von Laffert17201721Protestant Lutheran
Elisabeth Catharina von Stöterogge17221741Protestant Lutheran
Sophia Catharina von Meiseburg17411750Protestant Lutheran
Sibylla Hedewig von Laffert17511755Protestant Lutheran
Margaretha Elisabeth von Braunschweig17551793Protestant Lutheran
Luise Charlotta von Heimburg17931797Protestant Lutheran
Sophie Eleonore von Töbing17981810Protestant Lutheran
Rahel Charlotte von Töbing18101814Protestant Lutheran
Luise Amalie von Wallmoden18141825Protestant Lutheran
Auguste von Töbingen18261849Protestant Lutheran
Ottilie von Brömbsen18501906Protestant Lutheran
Auguste von Schmidt-Phiseldeck19071917Protestant Lutheran
Emma von Laffert19171930Protestant Lutheran
Luise von Brömbsen19311943Protestant Lutheran
Ilse von Döring19441972Protestant Lutheran
Helge von Bülow19721989Protestant Lutheran
Gisela Rothbarth19891999Protestant Lutheran
Monika von Kleist19992012Protestant Lutheran
Dr. Kristin Püttmannsince 2012 Protestant Lutheran

[9]

Cultural heritage

A large number of medieval manuscripts were produced in Medingen, 44 of which have survived and are conserved all over the world. The nuns enhanced the liturgy written in Latin with Low German prayers and songs, producing unique compilations of illuminated texts that were important to them as well as the noblewomen in the surrounding areas.[10]

Furthermore, the brewery (German: Brauhaus), built in 1397, survived the fire of 1781 and can still be seen today. It attests to the fact that the convent was originally built in the Brick Gothic style.[11]

References

  1. Lyßmann, Johann Ludolf, gewesenen Predigers zu Closter Meding, und nachherigen Superintendenten zu Fallersleben: Nachricht von dem Ursprunge, Anwachs und Schicksalen des im Lüneburgischen Herzogthum belegenen Closters Meding, dessen Pröbsten, Priorinnen und Abbatißinnen, auch fürnehmsten Gebräuchen und Lutherischen Predigern &c. nebst darzu gehörigen Urkunden und Anmerkungen bis auf das Jahr 1769 fortgesetzt. Mit Kupfern. Halle, 1772.
  2. Vogtherr, Thomas: Medingen. In: Dolle, Josef (ed.): Niedersächsisches Klosterbuch. Vol. 3, Bielefeld 2012, p 1044.
  3. Der Umzug in das heutige Medingen / Moving to today's Medingen at www.kloster-medingen.de. Retrieved 4 June 2013
  4. at www.inschriften.net. Retrieved on 5 June 2013
  5. Achten, Gerard (1987). De Gebedenboeken van de Cistercienserinnenkloosters Medingen en Wienhausen in: Miscellanea Neerlandica 3 (= FS Jan Deschamps), pp. 173–188.
  6. Die Reformation / The Reformation at kloster-medingen.de. Retrieved on 5 June 2013
  7. Das Leben nach der Evangelisierung / Life after the Reformation at kloster-medingen.de. Retrieved on 5 June 2013
  8. Der Brand 1781 und der Wiederaufbau / The fire of 1781 and Reconstruction at kloster-medingen.de. Retrieved on 5 June 2013
  9. Vogtherr, Thomas: Medingen. In: Dolle, Josef (ed.): Niedersächsisches Klosterbuch. Vol. 3, Bielefeld 2012, p 1049.
  10. Medingen Manuscripts, a project to digitise the manuscripts produced in Medingen, at research.ncl.ac.uk. Retrieved on 5 June 2013
  11. Historisches Brauhaus und ehemaliges Knechtshaus / Historic Brewery and Former Servants' House at www.kloster-medingen.de. Retrieved on 4 June 2013

Further reading

External links

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