Mosbach Abbey
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mosbach_Abbey an entity of type: Thing
Die Stiftskirche St. Juliana ist eine Simultankirche in Mosbach im Neckar-Odenwald-Kreis. Der evangelische Teil wird als Stiftskirche, der katholische Teil als Kirche St. Juliana bezeichnet.
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La collégiale Sainte-Julienne est une église simultanée située à Mosbach dans l'arrondissement de Neckar-Odenwald, Land de Bade-Wurtemberg. La communauté évangélique l'appelle collégiale, la communauté catholique église Sainte-Julienne.
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Mosbach Abbey (Kloster Mosbach) was a Benedictine monastery, later a monastery of Augustinian Canons, in the town of Mosbach in the Odenwald, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. As part of the systematic Carolingian Christianisation of this part of Germany, a number of monasteries were set up, covering between them the whole region of the Odenwald: Amorbach, Lorsch and Fulda, all founded in the 8th century, and Mosbach, the southernmost and least documented. It is first mentioned in a reference in the records of Reichenau Abbey in 825, but in the context of the other monastic foundations in the Odenwald, it seems likely that it was also founded in the previous century. The next record of it is in 976, when Emperor Otto II granted it to Worms Cathedral chapter as a private episcopal monastery. In a
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Stiftskirche St. Juliana (Mosbach)
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Collégiale Sainte-Julienne de Mosbach
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Mosbach Abbey
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Die Stiftskirche St. Juliana ist eine Simultankirche in Mosbach im Neckar-Odenwald-Kreis. Der evangelische Teil wird als Stiftskirche, der katholische Teil als Kirche St. Juliana bezeichnet.
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Mosbach Abbey (Kloster Mosbach) was a Benedictine monastery, later a monastery of Augustinian Canons, in the town of Mosbach in the Odenwald, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. As part of the systematic Carolingian Christianisation of this part of Germany, a number of monasteries were set up, covering between them the whole region of the Odenwald: Amorbach, Lorsch and Fulda, all founded in the 8th century, and Mosbach, the southernmost and least documented. It is first mentioned in a reference in the records of Reichenau Abbey in 825, but in the context of the other monastic foundations in the Odenwald, it seems likely that it was also founded in the previous century. The next record of it is in 976, when Emperor Otto II granted it to Worms Cathedral chapter as a private episcopal monastery. In about 1000, it was changed from a Benedictine house to one of canons regular. In 1268 however the abbey regained its independence with the re-grant of the right to elect its own abbots. In 1308 the present Saint Juliana's church was built to replace the earlier abbey church. In 1556 in the course of the Reformation the Elector Palatine Otto-Heinrich abolished Roman Catholic services and made the abbey church the town's Protestant parish church. The former Catholic parish church of Saint Cecilia's was thus rendered superfluous and was demolished. Otto-Heinrich dissolved the abbey itself in 1564, of which virtually nothing remains except the church. During the course of the 17th century the need for a Catholic church re-emerged, however, and in 1708 Saint Juliana's was partitioned to allow both Protestants and Catholics to use the same building for worship as a simultaneum: the Protestants have the former nave and the Catholics the former chancel. Their congregations form part of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Freiburg and the United Protestant Church in Baden, respectively.
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La collégiale Sainte-Julienne est une église simultanée située à Mosbach dans l'arrondissement de Neckar-Odenwald, Land de Bade-Wurtemberg. La communauté évangélique l'appelle collégiale, la communauté catholique église Sainte-Julienne.
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