Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Priory of Alspach à Kaysersberg dans le Haut-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Prieuré
Eglise romane

Priory of Alspach

    Route de Lapoutroie
    68240 Kaysersberg Vignoble
Ownership of an association
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Prieuré dAlspach
Crédit photo : Paul Eigner. (recadré par Ji-Elle) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1300
1800
1900
2000
vers 1000
Benedictine Foundation
1049
Affiliate to Hirsau
1138-1149
Romanesque reconstruction
1282
Sale to the plains
1898
MH classification
1972
Cultural restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Alspach Convent: by order of 6 December 1898

Key figures

Hugues IV d'Eguisheim - Founding Count Created the priory around 1000 with Heilwige.
Heilwige d'Eguisheim - Founding Countess Wife of Hugues IV, relative of Leo IX.
Ortlieb - Bishop of Basel Consacra the church in 1149.
Anne de Germanie (Gertrude de Hohenberg) - Protecting Queen Supported the sale to the clarisses in 1282.

Origin and history

The Priory of Alspach, located two kilometres from Kaysersberg in the Saint John Valley, was founded in the early 11th century (ca. 1000) by the Count of Eguisheim Hugues IV and his wife Heilwige, parents of Pope Leo IX. Originally occupied by Benedictine monks, he was affiliated in 1049 with the Hirsau congregation, a Swabian abbey. The site was entirely rebuilt between 1138 and 1149 at its present location, with a church dedicated to Saint John the Baptist and the Virgin, consecrated in 1149 by Ortlieb, bishop of Basel. The Romanesque architecture of this period includes a six-span nave, capitals carved of foliage, and a portal decorated with billets.

Between the 12th and 13th centuries, Benedictines consolidated their estate by acquiring land in Kientzheim, Sigolsheim, Ammerschwihr and Colmar. However, the Hirsau Abbey, in debt, ceded Alspach in 1282 to the Claress of Kientzheim, supported by Queen Anne of Germany (Gertrude of Hohenberg). The Gothic choir was then enlarged and consecrated around 1283. The convent buildings, rebuilt in the eighteenth century, housed after the Revolution a weaving factory, then a cardboard factory in the nineteenth century, resulting in the partial destruction of the church.

Ranked a historic monument in 1898, the priory today retains only the central Romanesque nave and the southern collateral, integrated since 2000 in an industrial courtyard. Six carved capitals (including one representing a lady with a deer and a fox) were moved to the Unterlinden Museum in Colmar. The remains, restored in 1972 by Kaysersberg's history society, now serve as a cultural hall. The name Alspach comes from the Weiss River, formerly called Alenspech, attested in the form Alwisbach (1130) or Alaspech (1364).

The site illustrates medieval monastic transformations from a prosperous Benedictine priory — marked by land acquisitions and remarkable Romanesque architecture — to a convent of clarisses, before its industrial conversion. The murals (including a medieval Saint Christophe today disappeared) and the remains of the cloister bear witness to his rich religious past. After 1794, the abbey became a dye factory, then a pulp mill (Weibel, 1879), before being preserved as a local heritage.

External links