Gernrode | ||
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Stadtteil of Quedlinburg | ||
View from the Harz mountains
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Coordinates: 51°43′28″N 11°8′21″E / 51.72444°N 11.13917°ECoordinates: 51°43′28″N 11°8′21″E / 51.72444°N 11.13917°E | ||
Country | Germany | |
State | Saxony-Anhalt | |
District | Harz | |
Town | Quedlinburg | |
Area | ||
• Total | 34.07 km2 (13.15 sq mi) | |
Population (2012-12-31) | ||
• Total | 3,533 | |
• Density | 100/km2 (270/sq mi) | |
Time zone | CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) | |
Postal codes | 06507 | |
Dialling codes | 039485 | |
Vehicle registration | HZ | |
Website | www |
Imperial Abbey of St Cyriacus in Gernrode | ||||||||||
Reichsabtei Sankt Cyriakus in Gernrode | ||||||||||
Imperial Abbey of the Holy Roman Empire | ||||||||||
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Capital | Gernrode | |||||||||
Government | Theocracy | |||||||||
Historical era | Middle Ages | |||||||||
• | Founded by Gero | 959 | ||||||||
• | Gained Reichsfreiheit from Emperor Otto II |
25 March 964 |
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• | Abbess raised to gubernatrix |
999 |
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• | Askanian protection | 1149–1616 | ||||||||
• | Gernrode named a city | 1539 | ||||||||
• | Sophia Elizabeth last elected abbess |
1593–1614 |
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• | Abbey formally transferred to Anhalt by Emp. Charles VI |
1728 | ||||||||
• | Final investiture of abbot by Emp. Francis II |
1802 |
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Today part of | Germany |
Gernrode is a historic town and former municipality in the Harz District, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 January 2014, it has been part of Quedlinburg. It was the seat of the former Verwaltungsgemeinschaft ("municipal association") of Gernrode/Harz.
First mentioned in 961, Gernrode received the privilege to bear its own coat of arms and seal, commonly regarded as town privileges. The town is best known for the Ottonian church of Saint Cyriakus, the collegiate church of a former Imperial chapter of nuns, and as the start of the narrow gauge Selke Valley Railway.
Gernrode is situated at the northeastern rim of the Harz mountain range and the Harz/Saxony-Anhalt Nature Park, about 6.5 km (4.0 mi) south of Quedlinburg. It lies at 215 m (705 ft) above sea level, at the foot of the Ramberg massif. It is nationally recognized for its health facilities and has state recognition as a spa town, where one may take the cure and recuperate in general (staatlich anerkannter Kur- und Erholungsort).
The town is also known as 'Gernrode/Harz', because of its location in the Harz mountains, and to distinguish it from Gernrode in the district of Eichsfeld in Thuringia, also called 'Gernrode (Eichsfeld)'.
In 959 the Saxon margrave Gero founded a convent of canonesses in the Schwabengau territory, within the grounds of the Geronisroth fortification he built about the same time. He also founded the collegiate church for the convent, which King Otto I took under his special protection by a 961 deed. It was dedicated to Saint Cyriacus, whose relics Gero brought back for the church from his second journey to Rome in 963. Without male heirs, he bequested his vast properties to the convent and made his daughter-in-law Hathui (d. 1014), widow of his son Siegfried, first abbess. She was succeeded by Adelaide, a sister of Emperor Otto III, who also was Princess-abbess of Quedlingburg since 999.