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Monastery of Helfta

Coordinates: 51°30′30″N 11°34′45″E / 51.5084°N 11.5793°E / 51.5084; 11.5793
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(Redirected from Convent of Helfta)
The monastic complex today

The monastery of Helfta is a Cistercian nunnery in the city of Eisleben.[1] It was originally active between 1229 and 1545,[2] and was restored in 1999.[1] It is dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary.[2]

The original convent was erected in 1229 by Count Burchard I of Mansfeld, on grounds near Mansfeld Castle and populated with seven nuns from the convent of Halberstadt [de]. In 1234, the nuns moved to Rossdorf and, in 1258, relocated a final time to Helfta [de], then just outside Eisleben. During the conflicts of the reign of Bishop Albert II of Halberstadt (r. 1325–1358), the monastery was devastated and the 100 nuns moved to Neuhelfta, a site closer to the city walls, in 1346. The monastery was sacked in 1525 during the Peasants' War. Those nuns who remained relocated to Althelfta. When the Abbess Walburge Reuber died in 1545, the convent was suppressed by the secular authorities.[2] It was refounded by ten nuns from the abbey of Seligenthal [de] in 1999. The new buildings incorporate some of the ruins of the old.[1]

During the abbacy of Gertrude of Hackeborn (r. 1251–1292), Helfta became the foremost centre of female mysticism [de] in Germany.[2] Mechthild of Magdeburg, Mechthild of Hackeborn and Gertrude the Great all lived and wrote there.[3] The Eucharist and the Sacred Heart were their major themes.[2][3]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Krieg 2000, p. 529.
  2. ^ a b c d e Schmidt 2002.
  3. ^ a b Bynum 2010.

Bibliography

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  • Bynum, Caroline Walker (2010). "Helfta, convent of". In Robert E. Bjork (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of the Middle Ages. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Finnegan, Mary Jeremy (1991). The Women of Helfta: Scholars and Mystics. University of Georgia Press.
  • Harrison, Anna (2008). "'Oh! What treasure is in this book?' Writing, Reading, and Community at the Monastery of Helfta". Viator. 39 (1): 75–106. doi:10.1484/J.VIATOR.1.100115.
  • Krieg, Martha Fessler (2000). "The 2000 Institute of Cistercian Studies Conference". Cistercian Studies Quarterly. 35 (4): 525–533.
  • Neville, David O. (2000). "Divergent Interpretations of Women's Agency and Luther's Political Agenda". In Hilary Collier Sy-Quia; Susanne Baackmann (eds.). Conquering Women: Women and War in the German Cultural Imagination (PDF). University of California Press. pp. 177–198.
  • Schmidt, Margot (2002). "Helfta". In André Vauchez (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages. James Clarke & Co. pp. 659–660.
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51°30′30″N 11°34′45″E / 51.5084°N 11.5793°E / 51.5084; 11.5793