Heilsbronn Abbey
0 sources
Heilsbronn Abbey
Summary
Heilsbronn Abbey is a Cistercian monastery[1]. It draws 48 Wikipedia views per month (cistercian_monastery category, ranking #20 of 47).[2]
Key Facts
- Heilsbronn Abbey is located in Heilsbronn[3].
- Heilsbronn Abbey is in the country of Germany[4].
- Heilsbronn Abbey's instance of is recorded as Cistercian monastery[5].
- Heilsbronn Abbey's instance of is recorded as tomb[6].
- Heilsbronn Abbey's instance of is recorded as abbey church[7].
- Heilsbronn Abbey's instance of is recorded as religious community[8].
- Heilsbronn Abbey's founder is recorded as Otto of Bamberg[9].
- Heilsbronn Abbey's architectural style is recorded as Romanesque architecture[10].
- The location of Heilsbronn Abbey was Heilsbronn[11].
- Heilsbronn Abbey's Commons category is recorded as Kloster Heilsbronn[12].
- Heilsbronn Abbey's occupant is recorded as Lutheranism[13].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises tomb[14].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises Minster Heilsbronn[15].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises Refectory[16].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises Dormitory[17].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises New Abbey[18].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises Monastery Chapel[19].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises House of Convent[20].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises Infirmatorium[21].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises Public Bath[22].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises Heilbrunnen[23].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises Bursaria[24].
- Heilsbronn Abbey comprises Kitchen Building[25].
- January 17, 1101 marks the founding of Heilsbronn Abbey[26].
- Heilsbronn Abbey was dissolved in 1578[27].
Body
Founding
Heilsbronn Abbey's founder is recorded as Otto of Bamberg[9]. January 17, 1101 marks the founding of it[26].
Identity
Heilsbronn Abbey's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'la', 'text': 'Abbatia Fons Salutis'}[28].
Dissolution
Heilsbronn Abbey was dissolved in 1578[27].
Why It Matters
Heilsbronn Abbey draws 48 Wikipedia views per month (cistercian_monastery category, ranking #20 of 47).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[29] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[30]