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Abbey of Prüm

Imperial Abbey of Prüm
Fürstabtei Prüm
Imperial Abbey of the Holy Roman Empire
1222–1576


Coat of arms

A small territory is highlighted in a map, near the territories labelled Archbishopric of Trier, the Duchy of Jülich and the Duchy of Lützelberg
The Imperial Abbey of Prüm, shown within part of the Holy Roman Empire as at 1400. The largest neighbours are the Duchy of Jülich (green, north), Bishopric of Liège (purple, northwest), Duchy of Luxembourg (orange, south, labelled Herzogtum Lützelburg) and the Electorate of Trier (purple, west). Also visible is the large Electorate of the Palatinate in yellowish green at the southeast of the map and the Rhine — the bold black line running north–south in the east of the map.
A large white-and-pink brick building
Capital Prüm Abbey
Government Principality
Historical era Middle Ages
 •  First foundation 721
 •  Second foundation 752 1222
 •  Raised to principality 1222
 •  Annexed by Trier 1576
 •  Secularised by France 1794
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Upper Lorraine
Electorate of Trier


Coat of arms

Prüm Abbey is a former Benedictine abbey in Prüm, Lorraine, now in the diocese of Trier (Germany), founded by the Frankish widow Bertrada the elder and her son Charibert, Count of Laon, on 23 June 720. The first abbot was Angloardus.

Bertrada of Prüm's granddaughter was Bertrada the younger, wife of King Pepin the Short (751–68). Prüm became the favourite monastery of the Carolingian dynasty and received large endowments and privileges. Pepin rebuilt the monastery and bestowed great estates upon it by a deed of gift dated 13 August 762. The king brought monks from Meaux under Abbot Assuerus to the monastery.

The church, dedicated to the Saviour (Salvator), was not completed until the reign of Charlemagne, and was consecrated on 26 July 799 by Pope Leo III. Charlemagne and succeeding emperors were liberal patrons of the abbey. Several of the Carolingians entered the religious life at Prüm; among these was Charlemagne's illegitimate son Pepin the Hunchback, who was exiled there after an abortive uprising and died there in 811, and Lothair I, who became a monk in 855. His grave was rediscovered in 1860; in 1874, the Emperor Wilhelm I erected a monument over it.


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