Maria Saal

Maria Saal

Coat of arms
Maria Saal

Location within Austria

Coordinates: 46°41′N 14°21′E / 46.683°N 14.350°E / 46.683; 14.350Coordinates: 46°41′N 14°21′E / 46.683°N 14.350°E / 46.683; 14.350
Country Austria
State Carinthia
District Klagenfurt-Land
Government
  Mayor Anton Schmidt (ÖVP)
Area
  Total 34.81 km2 (13.44 sq mi)
Elevation 505 m (1,657 ft)
Population (1 January 2016)[1]
  Total 3,830
  Density 110/km2 (280/sq mi)
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 9063
Area code 04223
Website www.mariasaal.at

Maria Saal (Slovene: Gospa Sveta) is a market town in the district of Klagenfurt-Land in the Austrian state of Carinthia. It is located in the east of the historic Zollfeld plain (Gosposvetsko polje), the wide valley of the Glan river. The municipality includes the cadastral communes of Kading, Karnburg, Möderndorf, Possau and St. Michael am Zollfeld.

History

The Zollfeld valley has been a cultural and political centre since Celtic tribes settled in the region. When their kingdom of Noricum had become a province of the Roman Empire in 15 BC, Emperor Claudius had the city of Virunum erected as the province's capital at the foot of the nearby Magdalensberg, where on the hill top a splendid Celtic settlement had already existed. Virunum became a centre of Early Christianity in the early 4th century as the see of a bishop under the jurisdiction of the Patriarch of Aquileia.

Maria Saal with Duke's Chair, engraving by Johann Weikhard von Valvasor, 1680

When pagan Slavic tribes entered the region around 590, they settled in a place called Krnski grad/Karnburg close to Virunum, which became the administrative centre of their Carantania principality. Here the ritual of installing the princes took place on the Prince's Stone, the base of an ancient Roman Ionic column originating from Virunum. The ceremony was continued in the local dialect of the Slovene language long into the Middle Ages. After Duke Odilo of Bavaria about 743 had vassalised the Carantanian prince Borut, the ritual was supplemented by a German-language ceremony at the Duke's Chair, a double throne made of stone, which can still be seen near Maria Saal.

The second Christianization of the area began at about 767 under Bishop Vergilius of Salzburg. His missionary Modestus had the first church of the Assumption of Mary built at Maria Saal/Gospa Sveta, across the plain from Krnski Grad/Karnburg, as the centre of his missionary activities. S. Maria ad Carantanum was first mentioned in an 860 deed, probably a smallish wooden church that has vanished long since. From this bishop's church - by no means a cathedral in the modern sense of the word - Christianity was spread all over Carantania.

After Charlemagne had finally deposed the Bavarian duke Tassilo III in 787, Karnburg remained the political capital when Carantania became a march of the Frankish realm. The East Frankish king Arnulf of Carinthia († 899), probably born in nearby Moosburg, built a Kaiserpfalz here. In 893 he appointed the Bavarian count Luitpold Margrave in the March of Carinthia, his Luitpolding descendants also ruled as Bavarian dukes.

When Emperor Emperor Otto II deposed Duke Henry II the Quarrelsome and finally separated Carinthia from Bavaria in 976, Karnburg also was the political centre of the duchy, a function that later was taken over by the ducal town of Sankt Veit an der Glan, a few miles to the north, and finally in the 16th century by the City of Klagenfurt to the south.

St Mary's Church

Church

Maria Saal is famous for its large pilgrimage church in seemingly transitional style from Romanesque to Gothic. Not much remains from the Romanesque church that had replaced the bishop's church of Modestus and his successors. The present fortified church building goes back to the mid-15th century and is in high Gothic style, actually reconstructed within 20 years after the big fire of 1669.

In view of the church's predecessor, which, as the church of Bishop Modestus, was the religious center of Carinthia in the 8th century and practically an episcopal see until 945, the present church is popularly still called a "Dom", i.e. "cathedral", which it, of course, has never been. The Roman sarcophagus beneath the church is said to contain the remains of Modestus. Still today, however, it is a major pilgrimage site for both German- and Slovene-speaking Carinthians and even for Slovene nationals.

Church Bells

# Foundry Cast year Mass Tone Diameter Name
1. Mathias Landsmann 1687 6,608 kg (14,568 lb) Fis° 222 cm (87 in) Maria Saalerin
2. Grassmayr 1925 2,098 kg (4,625 lb) cis'
3. Grassmayr 1972 1,310 kg (2,888 lb) dis'
4. Lorenz Pez 1670 ~1,100 kg (2,425 lb) f'
5. Grassmayr 1972 560 kg (1,235 lb) gis'
6. Grassmayr 1972 390 kg (860 lb) b'

Notable people

International relations

Twin towns — Sister cities

Maria Saal is twinned with:

References

Literature

"Maria Saal", Venice 2002, Alessandra Bettini Silvia Carraro; Tesi di laurea

Notes

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