Weingarten Abbey or St. Martin's Abbey (German: Reichsabtei Weingarten until 1803, then merely Abtei Weingarten) is a Benedictine monastery on the Martinsberg (St. Martin's Mount) in Weingarten near Ravensburg in Baden-Württemberg (Germany).
WeingartenAbbey or St. Martin's Abbey (German: Reichsabtei Weingarten until 1803, then merely Abtei Weingarten) is a Benedictine monastery on the Martinsberg...
Weingarten may refer to: Weingarten, Württemberg, Germany, a town WeingartenAbbeyWeingarten (Baden), Germany, a municipality Weingarten, Rhineland-Palatinate...
their devotion. Basilica of the Holy Blood, Bruges, Belgium WeingartenAbbey, Germany Abbey of the Holy Trinity, Fécamp, France St. James's Church, Rothenburg...
Count of Bregenz (d. 1160) Wulfhilde died in 1126 and was buried at WeingartenAbbey. Luscombe & Riley-Smith 2006, p. 755. Luscombe, David; Riley-Smith...
design of WeingartenAbbey and plans by Caspar Moosbruger. Following Wiedemann's design, the famous library was built in the North wing of the abbey. At the...
Ettal Abbey (German: Kloster Ettal) is a Benedictine monastery in the village of Ettal close to Oberammergau and Garmisch-Partenkirchen in Bavaria, Germany...
hillside, and on the hillside opposite is Schloss Banz, a former Baroque abbey. Together they are known as the Goldene Pforte or golden portal, an entryway...
additional information on individual abbeys, see: List A: Imperial abbeys named in the Matrikel below this list. Salem Weingarten Ochsenhausen Elchingen Irsee...
Meßkirch—Johann Nepomuk Chapel in Basilica St. Martin (decorations) (1733–1734) Weingarten—Benedictine Monastery Church of St. Martin of Tours and St. Oswald (frescoes)...
year 1094, when the Bavarian Duke Welf IV acquired the possessions of WeingartenAbbey. The controlling authorities were strongly factionalized until the...
as the younger House of Welf, or House of Welf-Este. Altdorf (later WeingartenAbbey), Swabia Ravensburg Castle, Swabia Welf III, Duke of Carinthia and...