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Ryd Abbey

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The monastery was suppressed in 1538 after Denmark had become officially Lutheran on 30 October 1536. The monks were turned out of the monastery and scattered: some simply went to work on farms; others travelled south to seek shelter in other Cistercian monasteries in Germany.
203:. This was not a success, and the monks were moved again to the site at Munkbrarup. This coincided with the arrival in Denmark of the then new and severe Cistercian order, to whom the bishop entrusted the new foundation, with a substantial endowment. 333:
The site has been investigated archaeologically a number of times, most recently in 2005, when excavations under the drained castle lake found numerous artefacts, the foundations of the monastic buildings and church and the monastic cemetery.
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At its greatest extent the monastery precinct measured 350 meters long and 200 meters wide. It consisted of a church and cemetery, hospital, guest house, farm and a wing for lay brothers, with kitchen and refectory.
468: 463: 109: 458: 237:. When the king came to hear of it, he accused the monks at Øm of harboring a criminal, but despite a search throughout Denmark's monastic houses, Arnfast could not be located. 318: 282:. The chronicle was started not long after the Cistercians took over Ryd Abbey and ends in 1288. It is clear from the writing that the writers were southern 478: 473: 453: 427: 379: 286:
and thus have a slightly different perspective from that of other contemporary chroniclers. The tone is distinctly anti-German. Along with
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Later in the century however the abbey acquired unwelcome notoriety because of the abbot Arnfast, who was accused of murdering King
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In 1433 the abbey was granted the lucrative right to the income from the pilgrimage chapel at a miraculous hermitage nearby, the
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The monastery was thus at last placed on a stable footing and prospered under the more rigorous discipline of the Cistercians.
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ordered the remains to be demolished, and had the stone reused for the construction of
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which had become disorderly, with a reputation for immorality and drunkenness. In 1192
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constitutes one of the main Danish sources for the history of the Middle Ages.
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Pictures of the site and of the drained pond at Schloss Glücksburg
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The abandoned buildings fell quickly into disrepair. In 1582 Duke
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that formerly occupied the present site of Glücksburg Castle in
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The abbey is perhaps best known as the place of origin of the
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by giving him poisoned communion wine on 29 May 1259 in
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in 1210. The monastic community originated however in
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Glücksburg Castle, on the site of the former Ryd Abbey
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Christian monasteries established in the 13th century
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Index

Annales Ryenses
references
inline citations
improve
introducing
Learn how and when to remove this message
Danish
‹See Tfd›
German
Latin
Cistercian
Munkbrarup
Glücksburg
Flensburg Fjord
Schleswig-Flensburg
Schleswig-Holstein
Germany

Esrum Abbey
St. Michael's Abbey
Schleswig
Benedictine
double monastery
Nicholas I
Bishop of Schleswig
Guldholm Abbey
Christopher I of Denmark
Ribe Cathedral
Archbishop of Lund
Jacob Erlandsen

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