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Ebersmunster Abbey dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye

Ebersmunster Abbey

    70 Rue du Couvent
    67600 Ebersmunster
Ownership of the municipality
Abbaye dEbersmunster
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Crédit photo : © Ralph Hammann - Wikimedia Commons - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
700
800
900
1000
1100
1200
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Vers 675
Foundation by Saint Deodat
684
Donation of Thierry III
818
Imperial Abbey
1155
Consecration of the Romanesque abbey
1632
Destruction by the Swedes
1726
Completion of the Baroque Church
1791
Dispersion of monks
1898
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Abbatial Church (former): Order of 6 December 1898

Key figures

Saint Déodat (ou Dié) - Founder and evangelizer Irish monk, founder of hermitage.
Duc Aldaric (ou Etichon) - Benefactor and father of Saint Odile Dota the abbey of lands and relics.
Sainte Odile - Patron of Alsace Lia abbey in Hohenbourg.
Peter Thumb - Baroque architect The church was rebuilt in the 18th century.
Sainte Hune - Canonized benefactor Dona property at the Abbey.
Abbé Bernard Roethlin - Abbreviated reconstructor Directed post-war work.

Origin and history

The Abbey of Ebersmunster, located in the Lower Rhine near Selestat, was founded in the 7th century by the Irish monk Saint-Déodat (or Deodat), evangelizer of the region. Initially a hermitage according to the rule of St.Columban, it became a Benedictine abbey under the impulse of the Duke of Alsace Aldaric (father of St.Odile), who gave it land and relics, including those of St.Mauritius. The site, formerly called Novenium, housed according to legend a pagan temple destroyed by Saint Materne, replaced by a first Christian church.

In the 8th century, the abbey adopted the Benedictine rule and enriched itself thanks to the gifts of the Dukes of Alsace, especially Etichon (or Aldaric). Saint Odile, daughter of Aldaric, strengthens his ties with the monastery by appointing religious there for solemn offices and by assigning property, including rights to the saline of Marsal. The abbey, raised to the rank of imperial abbey in 818, was placed under the authority of the bishops of Strasbourg at the end of the 9th century. His possessions then spread over nearly 80 villages, from the south of Mulhouse to the suburbs of Strasbourg.

The abbey has a golden age in the 12th–14th centuries, with a pilgrimage dedicated to St Nicholas and a partial reconstruction of the abbey in Romanesque style (consecrated in 1155). However, it was looted during the Peasants' War (1525) and a fire in 1632 by Swedish troops during the Thirty Years War. The monks took refuge in Séletat until 1648. The Baroque reconstruction began under Abbé Bernard Roethlin (1675–1715), with architect Peter Thumb, who erected the present church between 1720 and 1726, after a new fire in 1717.

The French Revolution dispersed the community in 1791 (26 monks) and sold the property of the abbey. The church, spared, becomes parish, while the convent buildings are partially destroyed. The stalls of the choir, carved by Mathieu Wurtzer, represent key figures such as Saint Odile, Saint Benedict, or Saint Hune (canonized in 1520). Today, the baroque abbey, classified as Historic Monument in 1898, houses a Silbermann organ and restored frescoes, bearing witness to its prestigious past.

The historical sources, such as the Ebersmunster Chronicle (1133) or the work of Abbé Grandidier (1776), underline his major role in the Christianization of Alsace. Carolingian diplomas (Pépin le Brief, Carloman I) confirm his privileges, although some documents were falsified in the 12th century to affirm his immunity. The abbey remains a symbol of Alsatian faith and art, despite revolutionary destructions and wars.

External links