Owners of Incunabula

D28B8882-1563-11EF-91F1-7669021DA34C.txt
Die Datei steht hier zur Verfügung: https://data.cerl.org/istc/_download/D28B8882-1563-11EF-91F1-7669021DA34C.txt
owners/176 Gavaudan

Buxheim, Carthusians, BVM, OCart

Besitzer Id176
EntitätstypKörperschaft
Biographische Angaben1402 - 1803
weitere InformationBod-inc: Carthusian abbey of S. Maria, near Memmingen in the diocese of Augsburg; founded in 1402 by Henri de Ellerbach and supressed in 1803; see Carl Rieger, Die ehemalige freie Reichskarthause Buxheim (Memmingen, 1922); Friedrich Stöhlker, `Die Geschichte der bischöflich exempten und reichsunmittelbaren Kartause Maria-Saal zu Buxheim (1402-1803/1812)', in Die Kartause Buxheim bei Memmingen in Kunst und Geschichte, ed. Fritz Arens and Friedrich Stöhlker (Buxheim, 1962). The books became the property of Graf von Ostein in 1803, passing to his sister, Gräfin von Hatzfeld, in 1809, and then to their cousin, Graf Friedrich Karl Waldbott von Bassenheim, in 1810; the books were finally sold in 1883 by Graf Hugo von Waldbott-Bassenheim (1820-1895); see Karl-Heinz Zuber, Der `Fürst Proletarier' Ludwig von Oettingen-Wallerstein (1791-1870). Adeliges Leben und konservative Reformpolitik im konstitutionellen Bayern, Zeitschrift für bayerische Landgeschichte, 10 (Munich, 1978), ad indicem; Catalog der Bibliothek des ehem. Carthäuserklosters Buxheim (Munich: Behrens, 20 Sept. 1883); MBK III 81-101; Krämer 131-43; Gruys II 254; Honemann, `Buxheim Collection 166-88; A Second Selection of Illuminated Manuscripts from c.1000 to c.1522: The Property of Mr. J.R. Ritman (London: Sotheby's, 19 June 2001), lot 16. See also H. M. Sögtrop, Die Schriften, Bücher und Bände der Bibliothek des ehemaligen Kartäuserklosters und des späteren gräflich Waldbott-Bassenheimischen Schlosses Buxheim, in Kartäuserliturgie und Kartäuserschrifttum, 2 vols, Analecta Cartusiana, 116 (Salzburg, 1988), I 166-79; invoice in Library Bills, dated 19 Feb. 1884. Other identifier: https://aeolus.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/collections/incunables/provenances_for_mei.xml#xpointer(//*[@id=
Andere NamensformenBuxheim, Reichskartause, OCart
Certosa di Buxheim
Kartause Maria-Saal
Charterhouse Buxheim
Weitere Identifierhttp://thesaurus.cerl.org/record/cnc00011233

Aktivität

Beginn (Jahr)1402
Ende (Jahr)1803
AnmerkungBuxheim Charterhouse was formerly a monastery of the Carthusians (in fact, the largest charterhouse in Germany) and is now a monastery of the Salesians. It is situated in Buxheim near Memmingen in Bavaria. In 1402, after a long period of decline, in an extreme move to preserve it the then provost, Heinrich von Ellerbach gave the establishment to the Carthusians, a move which proved extremely successful in reviving Buxheim both spiritually and economically. It was dissolved in the secularisation of 1802, when ownership passed first to the Counts of Ostein, who allowed the community to remain, and then in 1809 by inheritance to the Counts Waldbott von Bassenheim, who from 1812 used the premises as a castle. In 1916 the state took over the buildings, which in 1926 were acquired by the Salesians. (The date of dissolution is given in some sources as 1803; see for instance Volker Honemann, "The Buxheim collection and its dispersal," Renaissance Studies 9:2 (1995), 166-188).

BMC V:
p. 155: IB.19754; p. 170: IB.19646; p. 196: IA.19878; p. 335: IA.22037; IA.22043; p. 441: IB.22889; p. 494: IB.23623; p. 586: IB.25075; p. 598: IB.23657.
BMC VI:
p. 740: IC.26331; p. 889: IB.28361.
MARC Area Codee-gx
OrtBuxheim (Geonames Id: 2940457)
Beruf / Art der InstitutionReligiöse Einrichtung
CharakterisierungReligiös
Letzte Änderung2017-10-29 00:16:53

Alle Exemplare

Buxheim, Carthusians, BVM, OCart

Besitzer Id176
EntitätstypKörperschaft
Biographische Angaben1402 - 1803
weitere InformationBod-inc: Carthusian abbey of S. Maria, near Memmingen in the diocese of Augsburg; founded in 1402 by Henri de Ellerbach and supressed in 1803; see Carl Rieger, Die ehemalige freie Reichskarthause Buxheim (Memmingen, 1922); Friedrich Stöhlker, `Die Geschichte der bischöflich exempten und reichsunmittelbaren Kartause Maria-Saal zu Buxheim (1402-1803/1812)', in Die Kartause Buxheim bei Memmingen in Kunst und Geschichte, ed. Fritz Arens and Friedrich Stöhlker (Buxheim, 1962). The books became the property of Graf von Ostein in 1803, passing to his sister, Gräfin von Hatzfeld, in 1809, and then to their cousin, Graf Friedrich Karl Waldbott von Bassenheim, in 1810; the books were finally sold in 1883 by Graf Hugo von Waldbott-Bassenheim (1820-1895); see Karl-Heinz Zuber, Der `Fürst Proletarier' Ludwig von Oettingen-Wallerstein (1791-1870). Adeliges Leben und konservative Reformpolitik im konstitutionellen Bayern, Zeitschrift für bayerische Landgeschichte, 10 (Munich, 1978), ad indicem; Catalog der Bibliothek des ehem. Carthäuserklosters Buxheim (Munich: Behrens, 20 Sept. 1883); MBK III 81-101; Krämer 131-43; Gruys II 254; Honemann, `Buxheim Collection 166-88; A Second Selection of Illuminated Manuscripts from c.1000 to c.1522: The Property of Mr. J.R. Ritman (London: Sotheby's, 19 June 2001), lot 16. See also H. M. Sögtrop, Die Schriften, Bücher und Bände der Bibliothek des ehemaligen Kartäuserklosters und des späteren gräflich Waldbott-Bassenheimischen Schlosses Buxheim, in Kartäuserliturgie und Kartäuserschrifttum, 2 vols, Analecta Cartusiana, 116 (Salzburg, 1988), I 166-79; invoice in Library Bills, dated 19 Feb. 1884. Other identifier: https://aeolus.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/collections/incunables/provenances_for_mei.xml#xpointer(//*[@id=
Andere NamensformenBuxheim, Reichskartause, OCart
Certosa di Buxheim
Kartause Maria-Saal
Charterhouse Buxheim
Weitere Identifierhttp://thesaurus.cerl.org/record/cnc00011233

Aktivität

Beginn (Jahr)1402
Ende (Jahr)1803
AnmerkungBuxheim Charterhouse was formerly a monastery of the Carthusians (in fact, the largest charterhouse in Germany) and is now a monastery of the Salesians. It is situated in Buxheim near Memmingen in Bavaria. In 1402, after a long period of decline, in an extreme move to preserve it the then provost, Heinrich von Ellerbach gave the establishment to the Carthusians, a move which proved extremely successful in reviving Buxheim both spiritually and economically. It was dissolved in the secularisation of 1802, when ownership passed first to the Counts of Ostein, who allowed the community to remain, and then in 1809 by inheritance to the Counts Waldbott von Bassenheim, who from 1812 used the premises as a castle. In 1916 the state took over the buildings, which in 1926 were acquired by the Salesians. (The date of dissolution is given in some sources as 1803; see for instance Volker Honemann, "The Buxheim collection and its dispersal," Renaissance Studies 9:2 (1995), 166-188).

BMC V:
p. 155: IB.19754; p. 170: IB.19646; p. 196: IA.19878; p. 335: IA.22037; IA.22043; p. 441: IB.22889; p. 494: IB.23623; p. 586: IB.25075; p. 598: IB.23657.
BMC VI:
p. 740: IC.26331; p. 889: IB.28361.
MARC Area Codee-gx
OrtBuxheim (Geonames Id: 2940457)
Beruf / Art der InstitutionReligiöse Einrichtung
CharakterisierungReligiös
Letzte Änderung2017-10-29 00:16:53
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