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- Gutenzell_Abbey abstract "Gutenzell Abbey (German: Reichsabtei Gutenzell) was a Cistercian nunnery in the municipality of Gutenzell-Hürbel in the district of Biberach, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.The origins of the monastery are unknown. According to legend, the monastery was founded in the 12th century by two sisters of the aristocratic family Schlossberg (in later tradition called Schlüsselberg), whose castle was nearby, and called in Cella Dei, rendering Gottes Zelle in German.However, the first record of Gutenzell Abbey was its refoundation, or possibly confirmation, charter from 1237 as a Cistercian monastery under the name of Bona Cella, Gute Zelle in German, hence Gutenzell. In its early days the monastery was favoured and supported particularly by the noble family of Aichheim. The first abbess of Gutenzell Abbey was Mechthilda von Aichheim ruling from 1237 to 1243. Other local noble families also patronised the abbey. Following a huge fire in the period between the original foundation and the reconfirmation in 1237, several nobles of the surrounding area provided means for reconstructing the monastic buildings. During its history, the monastery housed predominantly noble women.Already in 1238, the refounded abbey was officially recognised by Pope Gregory IX who also put it under the spiritual supervision of Salem Abbey which lasted until 1753 when the task was transferred to Kaisheim Abbey.Most parts of the monastery had to be rebuilt in 1369 following a disastrous fire caused by lightning.In 1474 the monastery church Saints Cosmas and Damian became the parish church of the village of Gutenzell which had developed around the abbey. As it now stands, it is a medieval structure re-worked in the Baroque style. However, the origins of the church can be dated back to the 12th century, indicated by traces in its walls.In the Later Middle Ages Gutenzell Abbey gradually managed to achieve imperial immediacy, the legal basis of which was formed by two privileges by Emperor Sigismund in 1417 and 1437. From 1521, the abbey's chamberlain represented the Abbess of Gutenzell during meetings of the Swabian Circle.A fire in 1522 caused considerable damage, destroying the cloister.In 1525 the abbey was looted by revolting farmers of the Baltringer Haufen during the German Peasants' War.During the Thirty Years' War the nuns fled approaching Swedish troops to Styria in 1632. The convent remained there until 1647, shortly before the end of the war in 1648. However, on their withdrawal, Swedish troops laid fire to the abbey in December 1646.In 1685 Gutenzell Abbey received the privilege of inflicting high justice.In the second half of the 18th century the last major refurbishment of the monastery church was carried out in 1755-56 by the Wessobrunn stuccoist Franz Xaver Feuchtmayer the Elder, possibly following plans by Dominikus Zimmermann, whose daughter Maria Alexandra was prioress at the time. Later she would be abbess from 1759 to 1776. The frescoes are by Johann Georg Dieffenbrunner. The pulpit from 1756 was made by Stephan Luidl who also created the high altar in 1762, possibly also to designs by Dominikus Zimmermann.At the beginning of the 19th century, Gutenzell Abbey was in possession not only of the village of Gutenzell but also owned parts of other villages with a total of 1189 subjects. Amongst others it ruled over a third of the villages of Achstetten and Kirchberg and half of Oberholzheim.In 1803, the abbey was dissolved during secularisation and its assets transferred first to the Counts of Toerring, and then in 1806 to the Kingdom of Württemberg. At that time Gutenzell Abbey housed 36 nuns, a number which had been more or less consistent since the 16th century. The abbey was given a new rule by the Württemberg government which now functioned as superior. However, new nuns were not allowed to enter the convent. 28 nuns still lived in the monastery in 1812. The tradition of Gutenzell Abbey became extinct with the death of the last nun in 1851, the last abbess, Maria Justina von Erolzheim, having already died in 1809.The premises were almost entirely demolished in 1864.The former monastery church is now part of the Upper Swabian Baroque Route.".
- Gutenzell_Abbey dissolutionYear "1803".
- Gutenzell_Abbey foundingYear "1417".
- Gutenzell_Abbey thumbnail Wappen_Kloster_Gutenzell.svg?width=300.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageExternalLink klostertexte.php?kreis=&bistum=&alle=&ungeteilt=&art=&orden=&orte=1&buchstabe=G&nr=619&thema=Geschichte.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageID "5337195".
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageLength "7792".
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageOutDegree "62".
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageRevisionID "671831372".
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Abbess.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Achstetten.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Altenstadt,_Swabia.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Altenstadt_(Iller).
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Baden-Württemberg.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Baltringer_Haufen.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Baroque.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Biberach_(district).
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Category:1237_establishments.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Category:1417_establishments_in_the_Holy_Roman_Empire.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cistercian_nunneries_in_Germany.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Category:Imperial_abbeys.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Category:Imperial_abbeys_disestablished_in_1802–03.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Category:Monasteries_in_Baden-Württemberg.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Chamberlain_(office).
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Charter.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Circle_of_Swabia.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Cistercian_nunnery.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Cistercian_nuns.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Cistercians.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Cloister.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink County_of_Toerring.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Dominikus_Zimmermann.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Franz_Xaver_Feuchtmayer.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink German_Mediatisation.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink German_Peasants_War.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink German_language.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink German_mediatization.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Gutenzell-Hürbel.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink High,_middle_and_low_justice.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink High_justice.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Baden-Württemberg.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Württemberg.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_Abbey.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_immediacy.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Georg_Dieffenbrunner.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Kaisheim_Abbey.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Württemberg.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Kirchberg_an_der_Iller.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Late_Middle_Ages.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Later_Middle_Ages.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Imperial_abbeys.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Pope_Gregory_IX.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Pulpit.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Saints_Cosmas_and_Damian.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Salem_Abbey.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Sigismund,_Holy_Roman_Emperor.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Stephan_Luidl.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Stucco.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Styria.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Swabian_Circle.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Thirty_Years_War.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Tittmoning.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Toerring.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Upper_Swabia.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Upper_Swabian_Baroque_Route.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink Wessobrunn_Abbey.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink File:Austria_coat_of_arms_simple.svg.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink File:Blason_ville_fr_Vernantes_(Maine-et-Loire).svg.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink File:Gutenzell_Kanzel.jpg.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLink File:Gutenzell_Kloster_Modell.jpg.
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLinkText "Gutenzell Abbey".
- Gutenzell_Abbey wikiPageWikiLinkText "Gutenzell".
- Gutenzell_Abbey capital "Gutenzell Abbey".
- Gutenzell_Abbey commonName "Gutenzell Abbey".
- Gutenzell_Abbey continent "Europe".
- Gutenzell_Abbey conventionalLongName "Imperial Abbey of Guntenzell".
- Gutenzell_Abbey country "Germany".
- Gutenzell_Abbey dateEvent "1525".
- Gutenzell_Abbey dateEvent "1685".
- Gutenzell_Abbey dateEvent "from 1521".
- Gutenzell_Abbey datePost "1806".
- Gutenzell_Abbey datePre "1237".
- Gutenzell_Abbey empire "Holy Roman Empire".
- Gutenzell_Abbey era "Middle Ages".
- Gutenzell_Abbey event "Abbess represented in".
- Gutenzell_Abbey event "Granted high justice".
- Gutenzell_Abbey event "Looted by Baltringer Haufen".
- Gutenzell_Abbey event "Swabian Circle by".
- Gutenzell_Abbey event "chamberlain".
- Gutenzell_Abbey event "during Peasants' War".
- Gutenzell_Abbey eventEnd "Secularised to Toerring".
- Gutenzell_Abbey eventPost "To Württemberg".
- Gutenzell_Abbey eventPre "Refounded".
- Gutenzell_Abbey eventStart "Granted immediacy".
- Gutenzell_Abbey eventStart "by Emperor Sigismund".
- Gutenzell_Abbey governmentType "Theocracy".
- Gutenzell_Abbey hasPhotoCollection Gutenzell_Abbey.
- Gutenzell_Abbey imageCoat "Wappen Kloster Gutenzell.svg".
- Gutenzell_Abbey imageMap "Gutenzell Kirche.jpg".