Nonnenwerth
Nonnenwerth is an island near Bad Honnef in the Rhine, upriver from Cologne, administratively part of Remagen in Rhineland-Palatinate.
Religious houses
The island is mainly known as the site of a monastery of Benedictine nuns, later a Franciscan convent.
First foundation
There was a community of Benedictine nuns here from its foundation in 1126, by Archbishop Frederick I of Cologne and Abbot Kuno of Siegburg. In 1465 it joined the reform movement of the Bursfelde Congregation, but was severely damaged in 1477 during hostilities with Burgundy. It also suffered greatly from marauding Swedish troops in 1632, during the Thirty Years' War.
In 1773 it was destroyed by fire, and rebuilt in the Baroque style. In 1802 the nunnery was dissolved as part of the secularisation of ecclesiastical property. In 1821 the premises were sold by auction and used as an inn. This was visited by Franz Liszt, who composed the piece "Die Zelle in Nonnenwerth" about it.
Second foundation
In 1854 the buildings were acquired by Franciscans Religious Sisters for a convent. During World War I the Sisters began to teach girls and a secondary school soon developed, still in operation.
External links
- (German) Timeline of Nonnenwerth
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- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with German-language external links
- Franciscan convents
- River islands of Germany
- Monasteries in Rhineland-Palatinate
- 1126 establishments
- Religious organizations established in the 1120s
- Benedictine monasteries of nuns in Germany
- Islands of the Rhine
- Landforms of Rhineland-Palatinate
- Rhineland-Palatinate building and structure stubs