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Irsee Abbey

Imperial Abbey of Irsee
Reichsabtei Irsee
Imperial Abbey of the Holy Roman Empire
1694–1802


Coat of arms

Irsee Abbey church
Capital Irsee Abbey
Government Elective principality
Historical era Middle Ages
 •  Founded by Henry,
    Margrave of Ronsberg

1186
 •  Refounded after
    near-collapse

1373 1694
 •  Looted in Peasants' War 1525
 •  Looted in Thirty Years' War mid-17th century
 •  Granted Imperial immediacy 1694
 •  Mediæval buildings
    collapsed

1699–1704
 •  Secularised to Bavaria 1802
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Margraviate of Ronsberg
Electorate of Bavaria
Today part of  Germany


Coat of arms

Irsee Abbey, also the Imperial Abbey of Irsee (German: Reichsabtei Irsee), was a Benedictine abbey located at Irsee near Kaufbeuren in Bavaria. The self-ruling imperial abbey was secularized in the course of the German mediatization of 1802–1803 and its territory annexed to Bavaria. The buildings of the former abbey now house a conference and training centre for Bavarian Swabia.

According to tradition, the monastery, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, was founded in 1182 by Margrave Heinrich von Ursin-Ronsberg, to house a community that had grown up around a local hermit. The monastery was first established at the long-abandoned Burg Ursin, the margrave's ancestral castle, where St. Stephen Church’s cemetery is now located. A few years later, the monks headed by their first abbot Cuomo, decided to build a new monastery in the valley below where water was more readily available. The original name Ursin or Ursinium was eventually changed to Irsee.

The small abbey's community averaged 6 monks during its first century of existence, but this number was reduced to a single monk at one time during the troubled 14th century when Irsee came close to collapse due to poor harvest, famine, war and excessive expenses by pleasure-loving abbots. It was saved only by the intervention in 1373 of Anna von Ellerbach, the second founder, sister of the Bishop of Augsburg, and her appointee, abbot Conrad III, known for his extreme frugality. Prosperity was restored within 20 years and during the late Middle Ages, Irsee Abbey had become one of the major abbeys in the diocese of Augsburg.

The abbey was nearly obliterated during the German Peasants' War and again during the Thirty Years' War. It was ravaged no less than five times by Swedish troops and then devastated by Imperial Croat troops and French troops. Its library as well as its archives were destroyed. For many years the monastery was so destitute that it could not accommodate even half a dozen monks. The abbey was finally able to put itself back on a stable footing in the later 17th century.


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