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FULDA , a See also: town and episcopal see of See also: Germany, in the Prussian province of Hesse-See also: Nassau, between the RhSn and the Vogel-Gebirge, 69 m
.
N.E. from See also: Frankfort-on-See also: Main on the railway to Bebra
.
Although irregularly built the town is pleasantly situated, and contains two See also: fine squares, on one of which stands a fine statue of St Boniface
.
The See also: present See also: cathedral was built at the beginning of the 18th century on the See also: model of St See also: Peter's at See also: Rome, but it has an See also: ancient crypt, which contains the bones of St Bonif ace and was restored in 1892
.
Opposite the cathedral is the former monastery of St Michael, now the episcopal palace
.
The Michaelskirche, attached to it, is a small round See also: church built, in imitation of the
See also: Holy Sepulchre, in 822 and restored in 1853
.
Of other buildings may be mentioned the Library, with upwards of 8o,000 printed books and many valuable See also: MSS., the stately palace with its gardens and orangery, the former See also: Benedictine nunnery (founded 1625, and now used as a seminary), and the Minorite friary (1238) now used as a furniture warehouse
.
Among the secular buildings are the fine Schloss, the Bibliothek, the town See also: hall and the
See also: post office
.
There are several See also: schools, a hospital founded in the 13th century, and some new artillery barracks
.
Many See also: industries are carried on in Fulda
.
These include See also: weaving and dyeing, the manufacture of See also: linen, See also: plush and other textiles and See also: brewing
.
There are also railway See also: works in the town
.
A large See also: trade is done in cattle and grain, many markets being held here
.
Fine views are obtained from several hills in the neighbour-See also: hood, among these being the Frauenberg, the Petersberg and the Kalvarienberg
.
Fulda owes its existence to its famous abbey
.
It became a town in 1208, and during the See also: middle ages there were many struggles between the abbots and the townsfolk
.
During the Peasants' War it was captured by the rebels and during the Seven Years' War by the Hanoverians
.
It came finally into the possession of Prussia in 1866
.
From 1734 to 1804 Fulda was the seat of a university, and latterly many assemblies of See also: German bishops have been held in the town
.
The See also: great Benedictine abbey of Fulda occupies the place in the ecclesiastical See also: history of Germany which See also: Monte Cassino holds in See also: Italy, St See also: Gall in See also: South Germany, See also: Corvey in See also: Saxony, See also: Tours in See also: France and See also: Iona in Scotland
.
Founded in 744 at the instigation of St Boniface by his pupil See also: Sturm, who was the first See also: abbot, it became the centre of a great missionary
See also: work
.
It was liberally endowed with See also: land by the princes of the Carolingian See also: house and others, and soon became one of the most famous and wealthy establishments of its kind
.
About 968 the See also: pope declared thatits abbot was primate of all the abbots in Germany and See also: Gaul, and later he became a See also: prince of the See also: Empire
.
Fulda was specially famous for its school, which was the centre of the theological learning of the early middle ages
.
Among the teachers here were See also: Alcuin, Hrabanus Maurus, who was abbot from 822 to 842, and Walafrid See also: Strabo
.
Early in the loth century the monastery was reformed by introducing monks from Scotland, who were responsible for restoring in its old strictness the Benedictine See also: rule
.
Later the abbey lost some of its lands and also its high position, and some See also: time before the See also: Reformation the days of its See also: glory were over
.
Johann von Henneberg, who was abbot from 1529 to 1541, showed some sympathy with the teaching of the re-formers, but the See also: Counter-Reformation made great progress here under Abbot Balthasar von Dernbach
.
Gustavus See also: Adolphus gave the abbey as a principality to See also: William, landgrave of Hesse, but William's rule only lasted for ten years
.
In 1752 the abbot was raised to the
See also: rank of a See also: bishop, and Fulda ranked as a prince-bishopric
.
This was secularized in 1802, and in See also: quick succession it belonged to the prince of Orange, the See also: king of France and the
See also: grand-duchy of Frankfort
.
In 1816 the greater See also: part of the principality was ceded by Prussia to Hesse-See also: Cassel, a smaller portion being See also: united with See also: Bavaria
.
Sharing the See also: fate of Hesse-Cassel, this larger portion was annexed by Prussia in 1866
.
In 1829 a new bishopric was founded at Fulda
.
For the town see A
.
Hartmann, Zeitgeschichte'von Fulda (Fulda, 1895) ; J
.
Schneider, Fa hrer durch die Stadt Fulda (Fulda, 1899) ; and 6hronik von Fulda and dessen Umgebungen (1839) . For the history of the abbey see See also: Gegenbaur, Das Kloster Fulda See also: im Karolinger Zeitalter (Fulda, 1871—1874); Arndt, Geschichte See also: des Hochstifts Fulda (Fulda, 186o) ; and the FuldaerGeschichtsblatter (1902 fol.)
.
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