Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Cismar Abbey

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Phone
  
+49 4366 1080

Cismar Abbey

Address
  
Bäderstraße 42, 23743 Grömitz, Germany

Similar
  
Haus der Natur, Zoo Arche Noah, Grömitzer Welle, Gottorf Castle, Museumshof

Cismar Abbey (Kloster Cismar) was a Benedictine monastery located at Cismar near Grömitz, Schleswig-Holstein, in Germany.

It was founded in 1238 by Count Adolf IV of Holstein as alternative accommodation for Benedictine monks from Lübeck. In the mid-15th century it was one of the six original members of the influential Bursfelde Congregation, a Benedictine reform movement. After three prosperous centuries, based largely on its possession of a relic of the blood of Christ and a healing spring dedicated to John the Baptist, which made it a centre of pilgrimage, it was dissolved in 1561 during the secularisation brought about by the Reformation. The monastic library is preserved in the Danish Royal Library in Copenhagen.

The abbey is famous for its carved altar, dating from early in the 14th century, still in place in the church.

The other surviving buildings, after a wide variety of secular uses, now serve as a museum.

References

Cismar Abbey Wikipedia