Kastl Abbey
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Kastl Abbey or Monastery (Kloster Kastl) is a former monastery of the Benedictine Order in Kastl in Franconia, Bavaria.
[edit] History
The monastery, dedicated to Saint Peter, was founded in 1103, or shortly before, by Count Berengar I of Sulzbach together with Frederick and Otto, Counts of Kastl-Habsberg.
It was dissolved in 1563 in the course of the Reformation, but re-established as a Catholic monastery in 1625. From 1636 the building was used by the Jesuits, from 1773 by the Knights Hospitallers. Dissolved again in 1803, it was the seat of the Provincial Court until 1862.
Since 1958 the buildings have housed a Hungarian secondary school.
[edit] Princess Anna
Anna, daughter of Emperor Louis IV, died here on 29 January 1319 aged three. The princess's body was not taken to Munich but entombed in the monastery. In 1715 the body was removed from its tomb and kept in an oak cupboard. The body, preserved as a mummy, now rests in a shrine in the entrance hall to the monastery church, where it can be viewed.
[edit] External links
- (German) Klöster in Bayern
- (German) Prinzessin Anna