Page 151 - (DK Eyewitness) Travel Guide 2016 - Austria
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L ower  A UST r I A  A nd  BU r G enLAnd      149


                         Benedictine Abbeys

        Benedictine monasticism was established   whose history was chronicled by the
        in the 6th century, in Italy, by St Benedict   Benedictines. Fortified abbeys were
        of nursia, and its mother abbey was Monte  built on unassailable hilltops, and rural
        Cassino. The first Benedictine abbey in   settlements grew up in the shadow,
        Austria was instituted in the 8th century,    and under the protection of, the abbeys.
        in Salzburg, but it was not until the 11th   The beautiful silhouettes of the abbeys
        century that the order became a major   tower over their surroundings. Stunningly
        force. Its growth was linked to the increased  decorated inside, they boast marvellous
        importance given to the Austrian state   libraries that house outstanding records
              under the rule of the Babenbergs,   of the past.

                 Altenburg Abbey, (see p145) from the 12th
                 century, was altered in Baroque style in the
                 18th century. Its façade is adorned with
                 statues and paintings.



                                               Kremsmünster Abbey (see
                                               p204) houses a tombstone
                                               with the figure of Knight
                                               Gunther. The inscription tells
                                               the legend of how his father
                                               founded the abbey in 777,
                                               following his son’s death.




                          St Paul im Lavanttal Abbey
                          (see p272) houses one of the most
                          extensive Benedictine libraries
                          with over 40,000 volumes and
                          manuscripts.

                        The grand imperial staircase in
                        Stift Göttweig (see p142), lined with
                        statues, was designed by F. A. Pilgram
                        in 1739.
                                                The family tree of the
                                                Babenberg dynasty, who
                                                brought the Benedictine
                                                monks to their seat in the
                                                stunning monastery of
                                                Melk, can be studied in
                                                Klosterneuburg Abbey (see
                                                p138), just outside Vienna.



                                               In front of the Stiftskirche
                                               in Melk (see pp146–7), one of
                                               the most magnificent abbeys
                                               in Austria, extends a terrace
                                               affording fabulous views far
                                               across the Danube and the
                                               surrounding countryside.





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