Bad Bevensen: Cloister Medingen
Klosterweg 1
29549 Bad Bevensen
Telefon
Anfragen/Informationen 05821-2286Preise
Eintritt: | 4,00 € |
Kurzführungen: | 2,00 € |
Öffnungszeiten
vom 1. April bis 15. Oktober | |
Standardführung (ca. 90 Minuten) | |
dienstags - sonntags (auch feiertags) | 10 Uhr und 14 Uhr |
Kurzführung (ca. 30 Minuten) | |
dienstags - sonntags (auch feiertags) | 12 Uhr |
montags | geschlossen |
23. und 24. August | geschlossen |
Bad Bevensen: Cloister Medingen
Medingen
Cloister lies two kilometres outside of Bad Bevensen and is one of the
remaining inhabited cloisters on the heath.
Cultural life
in Bad
Bevensen would be unimaginable without them: the cloister
buildings in Medingen, two kilometres outside of the main town. The early
neo-classical structure on the banks of the River Ilmenau has the Church of St.
Mauritius at is centre and is one of the region’s architectural highlights.
Medingen Cloister is the only newly erected Protestant cloister in North
Germany.
The current
cloister was inaugurated in 1778 as an "Aristocratic Lutheran Convent” - the
old cloister had been destroyed by fire seven years earlier. The "Brewery”
built in the redbrick Gothic style at the rear part of the cloister is all that
remains as a reminder of the former cloister from the 14th century.
The predecessor to
the current cloister was built in 1336 in Zellensen on the banks of the Ilmenau
in the redbrick Gothic style for the nuns of the Cistercian convent in
Medingen, six kilometres away. The nuns no longer felt safe in the convent
founded in 1241. When they relocated to the new cloister on 24. August 1336,
however, they brought the old name with them: thus, Zellensen was renamed
Medingen and the former cloister site became the town of Altenmedingen, as it
is still known today.
The new cloister
in Medingen was situated directly on the River Ilmenau, which at the
time was the most important traffic and transport artery in the region.
Neighbouring Bevensen was still a
relatively insignificant market town, although Markt Bevensen did already have
a marksmen's guild that was able to assure the nuns’ protection.
Close connections
between the guild and the cloister were established at the latest in 1450, when
Bevensen was pledged to the cloister, and again in 1489, when it preliminary became
the property of the cloister: to this day, the current abbess is a guest of
honour at the annual guild parade and shooting competition. The guild’s
valuable flags were donated by the nuns of the cloister in 1848 and 1912 and
are kept at Medingen Cloister to this day, as is the guild’s valuable
collection of silver.
Medingen is one
of six active heath cloisters
During the Middle
Ages, Medingen Cloister belonged to the nuns’ convents in the
Principality of Braunschweig-Lueneburg. Many hymns penned here are still sung
by members of both denominations to this day. Numerous significant manuscripts
found today in international libraries were produced in the cloister’s writing
workshop.
The nuns were
mainly daughters of patrician families who brought valuable households with
them to the cloister, rapidly multiplying its wealth. In just a few decades,
Medingen Cloister had also acquired rights to the Lueneburg Saline, customs
duties, mills and shipping traffic on the Ilmenau. More than 100
nuns lived at Medingen Cloister at its peak just before the reformation.
When Duke Ernst zu
Braunschweig und Lueneburg – the "confessor” – converted to Lutheranism in
1524, the "Lutheran Duke” naturally
imposed the reformation on the six cloisters in his domain. The abbess of
Medingen, however, had the Lutheran bible sent by the duke burned in public.
The convent in
Medingen defied the orders of the head of state for more than 30 years. During
the course of the "nuns’ war”, the duke had a part of the cloister demolished
and, in 1539, even confiscated its property. It was 1555 by the time a small
amount was returned to the cloister – after the nuns had converted to the
Lutheran faith.
The strict
regulations governing convent life were loosened as a consequence of the
reformation and, in 1559, the convent became a "Protestant Ladies’ Foundation”.
Thus, the mainly aristocratic ladies were permitted to venture beyond the
cloister’s walls and even leave it entirely in order to marry. The conventuals
were much sought-after as potential wives on account of their upbringing,
education and housekeeping skills.
Community of
Christian women
Today, the
protestant foundation of Medingen has 14 conventuals and is the largest convent
in Lower Saxony. It is presided over by an abbess, as it was in 1494. Medingen
and the other five heath cloisters belong to the Cloister Chamber of Hanover.
The abbess reports exclusively to the Chamber’s president with regard to the
cloister’s management.
The conventuals
are responsible for safekeeping the cloister’s art treasures, ensuring the
transfer of knowledge and guiding visitors through the cloister. Its most
significant treasures include the abbess’s hooked staff from 1494, the golden
reliquary statue of St. Mauritius dating from the 15th century, a tapestry from
the 16th century, and old silver and porcelain as well as medieval trunks and
cabinets.
The six heath convents of
Lueneburg Heath are inhabited by single women of the protestant faith who live
together as a community, each in her own apartment with its own garden.
Contrary to catholic convents, women’s foundations have a more social, cultural
and artistic function. They accept not only unmarried women as members but also
widows and divorcees. Conventuals often join the convent at the end of their
working life to enjoy their retirement in a cultured, Christian atmosphere and
social inclusion.
Guided tours of
the cloister
The 40-metre tall,
late baroque church tower with its green-patinated copper spire is the
dominating element of today’s baroque-classic cloister on the Ilmenau. The
cloister’s layout represents a stubbed H, while its architecture is clearly
reminiscent of a castle complex.
The church at
Medingen Cloister is dedicated to St. Mauritius and the reliquary statue of the
martyr can be viewed in the "silver chamber”. The circular domed structure is
aligned with a "resurrection altar” in the form of a sarcophagus opposite the
entrance. The altar, pulpit and organ inside the church are arranged one above
the other. A relief image of the cross of the risen Christ and instruments of
torture are depicted between the altar and the pulpit.
The pulpit
protrudes from the church’s circular gallery. The loges in the well-lit and
neatly arranged church are located beneath the gallery, where the pewage also
reflects the circular layout. The "nuns’ choir” with its own simple altar is
situated above the congregational choir opposite the pulpit.
The impressive
portraits of every abbess since the 17th century that hang in the atmospheric
chapter room, the meeting place for the ladies of the foundation, are one of
the convent’s highlights.
During the summer
months, Bad Bevensen Marketing
and the cloister organise cultural weeks under the title "Musical Summer at
Medingen Cloister” with events held in the hall of the old brewery and the
round baroque church. The "Young Pianists” concert series held in the winter
features highly talented young musicians performing in the cloister’s
ceremonial hall.