Eberndorf Abbey
The former Augustinian "choral" Abbey of Eberndorf is located in a small bilingual market town half an hour to the east of Klagenfurt in Carinthia.
Following several changes in ownership it has since 1809 been part of the endowment of Saint Paul's Abbey, Lavanttal nearby. It currently houses Eberndorf's council office and kindergarten.
History
Beginnings
The Friulian Count Kazelin and his countess, who were childless, gifted a small "Church of Our Lady" and their worldly goods to endow a Monastery at Eberndorf in approximately 1100. of Aquileia confirms the gifting of the lands and associated rights in a document of 1106. The bodies of the benefactors were transferred to Eberndorf and a large church was constructed. The consecration of the church was carried out by Bishop Riwin of Concordia. The patriarch also endowed the monastery with assets in the surrounding area. Around the middle of the twelfth century Patriarch Pellegrinus I of Aquileia enlarged Eberndorf, which now, as an "Augustiner-Chorherren-Stift", became home to an Augustinian choir.Troubled times
The monastery was located close to the frontier that separated Carinthia from Styria, and in the years that followed there were frequent clashes with bailiffs employed by the Margraves of Styria, and with their successors, the Babenbergs. This ended with the transfer of the bailiffs involved to the Counts of Carinthia.Between 1446 and 1476 fortifications were added under Provost Lorenz. During the years of turbulence that ensued the monastery nevertheless suffered serious damage from incursions by Turkish and Hungarian armies. The building was destroyed by fire in 1483, and rebuilt under the leadership of Provost Leonhard of Keutschach, and further construction took place at the start of the next century under Provost Valentin Fabri.
Reformation and counter-reformation
The "Augustiner-Chorherren-Stift" remained in place till 1604 when the monastery became a Jesuit establishment in the wider context of the Catholic fight-back against the Protestant Reformation of the previous century. By the end of the sixteenth century the monastery had in any case become very run down as a result of "mismanagement", and there had been talk of simply closing it down. The installation of the Jesuits by Pope Clement VIII involved bringing Eberndorf under the authority of the Jesuit College in Klagenfurt, and enjoyed the support of the emperor. The last provost before the Jesuits moved in was Sebastian Kobel. Surviving inscriptions indicate that the last major burst of building activity at the monastery took place during the middle years of the seventeenth century.Later centuries
The Suppression of the Society of Jesus in 1773 ushered in a period of uncertainty for the monastery in Eberndorf, the property of which eventually, in 1809, came under the protection of the Benedictines at St. Blaise Abbey on the southern edge of the Black Forest. Three years later responsibility for the assets was transferred to the care of the very much closer Benedictine Monastery in the Laventtal (valley). That remains the position today. The buildings themselves are leased to the municipality and accommodate a school and various administrative facilities.Architecture
Overall
The plan of the site is relatively large, the buildings grouped on a gentle slope, with the frontages facing to the west and the south. The eastern side is occupied chiefly by farm buildings. The north side faces onto a wooded area and is accordingly left relatively wild.Gatehouse and entrance
The gatehouse is positioned on the southwest corner of the complex, and faces south. It is a two storey structure with a hipped roof. Like the adjacent buildings to its east, it originated as part of the late medieval fortifications. In the seventeenth century the gatehouse was slightly modified, however. The gateway features a banded stone frame topped with a protruding gable, with the year "1634" carved directly above it, partially surrounding a medallion shape showing the "Christ Monogramme".Visitors passing through the gatehouse still do so, moving from south to north, between a pair of walls topped with battlements, and would originally have been required to do so while passing between two stout gates at the opposite ends of the lengthy passage through the gatehouse, but the outer gate is no longer in place.