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library. The buildings were used firstly as a seminary and later as a poorhouse and charity school. On 11 June 1852 the bishop of
Hildesheim, Eduard Jakob Wedekin, opened in the "Karthaus", as the south wing of the secularised charterhouse was called, the St. Bernward Hospital (St. Bernward
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On 30 July 1545 the monastery was plundered yet again. The documents and the contents of the treasury were taken over by the town council. Parts of the buildings were used for town defence. Only in 1613 were the
Carthusians able to reoccupy the premises. On 23 July 1626, during the
99:(a gate to the new suburb of Dammstadt) to the west of the town, on land belonging to the von Rössing family where the Bennoburg fortress had previously stood. The charterhouse did not become the full owner of the ground on which it stood until 1448.
234:, assigned its assets and estate to the improvement of the income of the Hildesheim seminary. The monks were transferred to various other monasteries. The last prior, Carl Unkraut (1731–1823), moved to
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and after repeated looting of the charterhouse in 1542 and 1542 the monks, under their prior
Dietrich Loher (c.1495–1554), withdrew to Cologne. When in 1543 Loher was appointed prior of
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the monastery was re-established inside the town walls in 1659–1660 for its better protection, between the cathedral close and the
Langelinienwall.
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In 1777 the monastery was dissolved, after the Prince-Bishop of
Hildesheim Friedrich Wilhelm von Westphalen, in agreement with
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Mittheilungen geschichtlichen und gemeinnĂĽtzigen
Inhalts - Zeitschrift fĂĽr das FĂĽrstenthum Hildesheim und die Stadt Goslar
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215:), entered the monastery. Aly, who at his baptism took the surname "Weissenburg" after the German name of his home town,
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130:, Danish troops and inhabitants of Hildesheim destroyed the monastery. The ruins were completely demolished in 1632.
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Die Diözese
Hildesheim in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart – Jahrbuch des Vereins für Heimatkunde im Bistum Hildesheim
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Die Kartäuser im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert – Akten des VIII. Internationalen
Kongresses für Kartäuserforschung
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Die Diözese
Hildesheim in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart – Jahrbuch des Vereins für Heimatkunde im Bistum Hildesheim
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BĂĽcher, Bibliotheken und
Schriftkultur der Kartäuser – Festgabe zum 65. Geburtstag von Edward Potkowski
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Bücher, Bibliotheken und Schriftkultur der Kartäuser - Festgabe zum 65. Geburtstag von Edward Potkowski
344:, Verlag Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik der Universität Salzburg, Salzburg 2008, p. 34
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On 20 June 1522 inhabitants of Hildesheim set fire to the monastery during the
91:. The deed of foundation was executed on 2 May 1388. The first monks were from
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413:, ed. Gerhard Schlegel, James Hogg, Band 2, Salzburg 2004, 740–747
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Mitteleuropäische Kartausen in der Familie des Kartäuserordens
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In 1708 Bernhard Aly, an assimilated Ottoman prisoner of war (
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The last visible structural trace of the charterhouse is the
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311:, Verlag Gerstenberg, Hildesheim 1832, pp. 263–267
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Die Aufhebung der Kartause Hildesheim im Jahre 1777
298:, Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart 2002, p. 139
122:, several of the Hildesheim monks accompanied him.
432:Anmerkungen zur Geschichte der Kartause Hildesheim
324:. Verlag Styria, Graz-Wien-Köln 1981, p. 19,
83:from 1365 to 1398, in thanks for his victory over
357:, Dialogverlag, Münster 2006, pp. 536–538
245:Part of the monastery library was acquired by
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294:Sönke Lorenz, Oliver Auge, Robert Zagolla:
355:Der katholische Klerus im Oldenburger Land
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385:Zur Geschichte der Hildesheimer Kartause
370:, Band 20, Berlin 1886, p. 120
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499:Buildings and structures in Hildesheim
391:, Band 55 (1987), pp. 79–88
307:Edmund Koken, Hermann Adolf LĂĽntzel:
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438:, Band 56 (1988), pp. 7–17
322:Geschichte des Islams in Deutschland
85:Magnus I, Duke of Brunswick-LĂĽneburg
366:Architektenverein zu Berlin (ed.):
23:Baroque gateway of the charterhouse
16:Charterhouse in Hildesheim, Germany
250:Krankenhaus), which still exists.
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489:Carthusian monasteries in Germany
402:, Ittingen 1988, pp. 185–211
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504:1388 establishments in Europe
50:Domus Claustri Beatae Mariae
494:Monasteries in Lower Saxony
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320:Muhammad Salim Abdullah:
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104:Hildesheim Diocesan Feud
28:Hildesheim Charterhouse
411:Monasticon Cartusiense
276:Saint Bruno of Cologne
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465:52.14694°N 9.94833°E
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198:Under Prince-Bishop
168:The new charterhouse
141:The old charterhouse
112:Buxheim Charterhouse
81:bishop of Hildesheim
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93:Erfurt Charterhouse
59:or charterhouse in
36:Kartause Hildesheim
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470:52.14694; 9.94833
232:Emperor Joseph II
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264:Neue StraĂźe
67:, Germany.
483:Categories
456:09°56′54″E
453:52°08′49″N
426:3515080937
407:Hildesheim
330:3222113521
282:References
212:BeutetĂĽrke
61:Hildesheim
54:Carthusian
254:Buildings
116:Memmingen
87:, in the
57:monastery
217:Belgrade
260:Baroque
97:Dammtor
71:History
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398:. In:
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240:JĂĽlich
207:German
32:German
238:near
114:near
46:Latin
422:ISBN
326:ISBN
274:and
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