Sedlec Abbey

Sedlec Abbey

Abbey church
49°57′35.43″N 15°17′23.56″E / 49.9598417°N 15.2898778°E / 49.9598417; 15.2898778Coordinates: 49°57′35.43″N 15°17′23.56″E / 49.9598417°N 15.2898778°E / 49.9598417; 15.2898778
Location Kutná Hora, Czech Republic
Denomination Catholic
Architecture
Status Former Cistercian monastery
Style Gothic
Groundbreaking 1142 (1142)
Type Cultural
Designated 1995
Region Europe and North America

Sedlec Abbey is a former Cistercian monastery in Sedlec, part of Kutná Hora in the Czech Republic. Founded in 1142, it was the first Cistercian foundation in Bohemia. It was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995.

History

Sedlec Abbey was founded in 1142 from Waldsassen Abbey in Sedlec as the first Cistercian monastery in Bohemia. The grounds covered by wood and swamp were granted by Miroslav, House of Wartenberg.[1] It flourished under abbot Heinrich Heidenreich, due to silver mining in the region.

The abbey was burnt in April 1421 by Hussites led by Jan Žižka. The library had been rescued before to Stift Klosterneuburg in Lower Austria. It took until 1620 to revive the monastery. It flourished once more after the Thirty Years' War, when several buildings were erected or remodeled. The abbey was dissolved in 1783.

Buildings

The abbey was originally built in Romanesque style. It was remodel in Gothic style between 1280 and 1320. After the destruction by the Hussites, the buildings were reconstructed at the beginning of the 18th century.

The abbey church was dedicated to the Assumption of Mary and St. John. It was built as a basilica with five naves between 1280 and 1330. Destroyed in 1421, it was rebuilt from 1699 to 1707 after designs by Paul Ignaz Bayer and Johann Blasius Santini-Aichel. Another restoration, trying to preserve the original appearance, was performed from 1854 to 1857.

The chapel Kostel Všech svatých (All Saints' Chapel), next to the cemetery, was run from 1389 by a Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulchre. The building dates to around 1400, was rebuilt several times and remodeled in Baroque style in 1710 by Santini-Aichel. It holds in its basement the Sedlec Ossuary.

Literature

References

  1. Die Kirche zu Sedletz (PDF; 273 kB) in den Mittheilungen der k.k. Central-Commission 1856
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