Elsey Abbey

Elsey Abbey, earlier Elsey Priory (German: Kloster Elsey) is a former women's religious house located near Elsey, now part of Hohenlimburg, Hagen, Germany.

It was founded in about 1220 by Friedrich von Isenberg[1] for Premonstratensian canonesses and endowed with the local parish church and other possessions. In the 15th century it became a house of secular canonesses of the nobility (a Damenstift) under an abbess. In the 16th century during the Reformation the parish became Protestant and the abbey followed suit in due course.

It was dissolved in 1810 during the secularisation of the period.

There remain the Romanesque church and some of the canonesses' houses.

Prioresses

Abbesses

Amalie Dorothea Elisabeth von der Bottlenberg, Lutheran abbess from 1776 to 1797.

Notes and references

  1. executed in 1226 for the murder of his cousin Saint Engelberg of Cologne, Count of Berg
  2. daughter of Heinrich von Dudinck zu Werdringen
  3. daughter of Adrian von Syberg zum Busch and Margareta von Voss zum Rodenberg
  4. daughter of Hans Adolf zu Bentheim-Tecklenburg and Johanna Dorothea zu Schaumburg-Lippe-Bernburg
  5. daughter of Friedrich Moritz zu Bentheim-Tecklenburg and Christiane Marie zur Lippe

Sources

Coordinates: 51°21′37″N 7°33′43″E / 51.360233°N 7.561867°E / 51.360233; 7.561867

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