The establishment of Gandersheim Abbey by the …
Years: 1000 - 1000
The establishment of Gandersheim Abbey by the founder of the Liudolfingers gives it especial importance during the Ottonian period.
Until the foundation of Quedlinburg Abbey in 936, Gandersheim had been among the most important Ottonian family institutions, and its church is one of the Ottonian burial places.
The canonesses, commonly known as Stiftsdamen, are allowed private property and as they have taken no vows, are free at any time to leave the abbey.
The Ottonian kings and their entourages often stay in Gandersheim, as will their Salian successors, and the canonesses are by no means remote from the world.
Apart from the memorial masses for the founding family, one of the main duties of the canonesses is the education of the daughters of the nobility (who are not obliged to become canonesses themselves).
Roswitha of Gandersheim, famous as the first female German language poet, is one of the abbey's best-known canonesses.
During a period of approximately twenty years—from about 950 to 970 or so—she wrote historical poetry, spiritual pieces and dramas, and the Gesta Ottonis, expressing her veneration of Otto I.
The Great Gandersheim Conflict, as it is called, originates from the turn of the tenth and eleventh centuries.Bernward, the Bishop of Hildesheim, asserts claims over the abbey of Gandersheim and its estates, which are located in an area where the boundaries between the Bishopric of Hildesheim and the Archbishop of Mainz are unclear.
The pressure from Hildesheim will move the abbey increasingly into the sphere of Mainz.
The situation will only eventually be resolved by a privilege of Pope Innocent III of June 22, 1206, freeing the abbey once and for all from all claims of Hildesheim, and granting the abbesses the title of Imperial princesses (Reichsfürstinnen).
