Essen Abbey


Essen Abbey was a community of secular canonesses for women of high nobility that formed the nucleus of modern-day Essen, Germany.
A chapter of male priests were also attached to the abbey, under a dean. In the medieval period, the abbess exercised the functions of a bishop, except for the sacramental ones, and those of a ruler, over the very extensive estates of the abbey, and had no clerical superior except the pope.

History

It was founded about 845 by the Saxon Altfrid, later Bishop of Hildesheim and saint, near a royal estate called Astnidhi, which later gave its name to the religious house and the town. The first abbess was Altfrid's kinswoman, Gerswit. Altfrid also built a church for the canonesses, the Stiftskirche, later known as the Essener Münster and from 1958 as Essen Cathedral. Only women from the highest circles of German nobility were accepted.
Because of its advancement by the Liudolfings, the abbey became reichsunmittelbar sometime between 874 and 947. Apart from the abbess, the canonesses did not take vows of perpetual celibacy; they lived in some comfort in their houses, with their own staff, and wore secular clothing except when performing clerical roles such as singing the Divine Office. They could travel, and leave the abbey at any time to marry.
Its best years began in 973 under the Abbess Mathilde, granddaughter of Otto I, [Holy Roman Emperor|Otto I] and thus herself a Liudolfing, who governed the abbey until 1011. In her time the most important of the art treasures of what is now the Essen Cathedral treasury came to Essen. She acquired from Koblenz the relics of for the abbey, and donated the processional Cross of Otto and Mathilde.
The next two abbesses to succeed her were also from the Liudolfing family and were thus able further to increase the wealth and power of the foundation. In 1228 the abbesses were designated "Princesses" for the first time. From 1300 they took up residence in Schloss Borbeck, where they spent increasing amounts of time. In wartime it was also a refuge for common people.
The abbey's territorial lordship, to which belonged the town of Essen that was centered on the monastery, grew up between the Emscher and the Ruhr, The town's efforts to become an independent Imperial city were frustrated by the abbey in 1399 and again, conclusively, in 1670. In the north of the territory was located the abbey's monastery of Stoppenberg, founded in 1073; to the south was the collegiate foundation of Rellinghausen. Also among the possessions of the abbey was the area around Huckarde, on the borders of the County of Dortmund and separated from the territory of Essen by the County of the Mark. Approximately 3,000 farms in the area owed dues to the abbey, in Vest Recklinghausen, on the Hellweg and around Breisig and Godesberg. From 1512 to its dissolution the Imperial abbey belonged to the Lower Rhenish-Westphalian Circle.
The abbey's Vogt were, in sequence:
In 1495 the abbey signed a contract with the Dukes of Cleves and Mark regarding the inheritance of the Vogtei, whereby it lost some of its political independence in that it was no longer able to choose its own Vogt.
Princess Abbess Franziska Christine founded an orphanage for the Essen Abbey Region near Steele.
From 1802 the territory was occupied by Prussian troops. The abbey was dissolved in 1803. The spiritual territory of passed to Prussia, then between 1806/1807 to 1813 to the Duchy of Berg and afterward to Prussia again. The last abbess, Maria Kunigunde von Sachsen, died on 8 April 1826 in Dresden.
When in 1958 the Roman [Catholic Diocese of Essen|Diocese of Essen] was created, the former abbey church became Essen Cathedral, to which the abbey's treasury, including the famous Golden Madonna of Essen, also passed.

List of the Abbesses, later Princess-Abbesses, of Essen

The dates of the rule of the abbesses are incompletely preserved. The sequence of the abbesses between Gerswid II and Ida is uncertain, particularly regarding the Abbess Agana.
File:Stifterbild Theophanu-Evangeliar2.jpg|thumb|The cover of the gospels donated by Theophanu, with a small donor portrait of the abbess
File:Svanhild-Evangeliar.jpg|Gospel book of Abbess Svanhild, MS. Latin 110, John Rylands Library; Abbess Svanhild and Prioress Brigitte offer the book to Mary, Mother of God |thumb
  • Gerswid I
  • Gerswid II
  • Adalwi
  • Wicburg
  • Mathilde I
  • Hadwig I – it was probably under her that the abbey became reichsunmittelbar
  • Agana
  • Ida
  • Mathilde II
  • Sophia
  • Theophanu
  • Svanhild – founded Stoppenberg Abbey
  • Lutgarde
  • Oda
  • Ermentrude
  • Hedwig von Wied
  • Elisabeth I
  • Adelheid
  • Elisabeth II
  • Bertha of Arnsberg
  • Beatrix of Holte
  • Kunigunde of Berg
  • Katharina of the Mark
  • Irmgard of Broich
  • Elisabeth III of Nassau
  • Margarete I of the Mark-Arensberg
  • Elisabeth IV Stecke von Beeck
  • Sophia I von Daun-Oberstein
  • Elisabeth V von Saffenberg
  • Sophia II von Gleichen, sister of the Abbot of Werden
  • Meina von Daun-Oberstein
  • Margarete II von Beichlingen
  • Sibylle von Montfort
  • Katharina von Tecklenburg
  • Maria von Spiegelberg
  • Irmgard von Diepholz
  • Elisabeth VI von Manderscheid-Blankenheim-Gerolstein
  • Elisabeth VII von Sayn
  • Elisabeth VIII von Manderscheid-Blankenheim
  • Margarete Elisabeth von Manderscheid-Blankenheim
  • Elisabeth IX von Bergh-s’Heerenberg
  • Maria Clara von Spaur, Pflaum und Vallier
  • Anna Eleonore von Stauffen
  • Anna Salome von Salm-Reifferscheid
  • vacant: Regency of the General Chapter
  • Anna Salome of Manderscheid-Blankenheim
  • Bernhardine Sophia of East Frisia and Rietberg
  • Francisca Christina of Pfalz-Sulzbach
  • Maria Kunigunde of Saxony

Burials