Native name: Dominikanerinsel | |
---|---|
Geography | |
Coordinates | 47°39′51″N9°10′42″E / 47.66417°N 9.17833°E |
Area | 0.018318 km2 (0.007073 sq mi) |
Length | 0.246 km (0.1529 mi) |
Width | 0.100 km (0.0621 mi) |
Administration | |
State | Baden-Württemberg |
Landkreis | Konstanz |
Große Kreisstadt | Constance |
Demographics | |
Population | 21 |
The Dominican Island or Constance Island (German : Dominikanerinsel or Konstanzer Insel) [1] is an island in Lake Constance immediately east of the city of Constance. With an area of 1.8 hectares, it is one of the smaller islands in the lake. The island is separated from the city center by a six-metre-wide (20 ft) channel, and connected to it by a bridge. The island is dominated by the Steigenberger hotel, which is housed in the former Dominican convent.
The Dominican Island, 246 m long from north to south and up to 100 m wide.
The channel that separates the island from the mainland is 210 m long, but only 6 m wide. The channel is on the western side of the island; opposite the island is the Niederburg section of the old city center. The channel used to be much wider [2] and was partially filled for the construction of the railway line. The island is barely recognizable as such because the narrow channel is visible only to pedestrians walking on the wharf along the old waterfront. [3] The Constance railway station and the port are about 600 m south of the bridge. The road to the railway station leads past the city park.
In the south, the swan pond lies between the island and the city park. The city parks sits on a piece of the lake that was filled in during 1880. Even after this water was filled in, the Swan Pond is not completely surrounded by land. In the northwest, the pond abuts the city canal; is the southeast, the pond is separated from the open lake by a 15 m wide bottleneck. This compound falls dry at low tide. The Swan Pond is almost 90 m long and up to 30 m wide, it covers an area of about 1,800 square feet.
The northern tip of the island is located 30 m from the Old Rhine Bridge, at the point where the Seerhein flows out of the Upper Lake towards the Lower Lake. The chapter house is located to the north of the main building. The hotel car park separates the two buildings.
To the east of the island is the Constance Hopper part of Lake Constance. Here we find the famous terrace of the hotel's restaurant, as well as, further south, the hotel's lido and recreation lawn. At the southern end of the lawn, there is a pavilion.
In the central building of the hotel, we find the grave of Manuel Chrysoloras, who died here during the Council of Constance. [4]
The island belongs to urban district Altstadt ("Old Town"). On 31 December 2008, 21 people reported having their principal residence on Dominican Island. [5]
The University of Constance was founded in 1966 and was initially housed in the south wing of the convent building. [6] The south wing was the temporary seat of the university, [7] which was spread out to various buildings in several parts of the city, until the newly commissioned buildings on the Giesberg were ready. Even today, the hotel building is frequently used for lectures and meetings of the University of Constance [8] [9] and for events organized by the Constance European Colloquium. [10]
At the southwest of Lake Constance and in the present city of Constance, the remains of a Neolithic village have been found at some distance from the shore. Such finds have also been made in the swan pond between the southern shore of the Dominican island and the city park created in 1880. Fragments and wood were discovered, and traces of stilt houses. They were dated between the fifth and the third millennium BCE. [11]
Other shore settlements in the Constance Hopper, also stilt houses were dated to the Neolithic period around 2200 BC to 1800 BC. [12]
At the end of the second Century BCE Celtic people lived in fishing settlements on the territory of Constance and on the Dominican island. [12]
The Roman rule in the area around Lake Constance started in the year 15 CE with the conquest of Augustus. The Celtic oppidum was destroyed. The area then belonged to the province Raetia until the end of Roman rule around the year 400.
In the year 207, Emperor Severus sent governor Constantine into the area. Constantine set up his headquarters in Pfyn in today's Thurgau. He also set up a well-fortified hunting lodge on Dominican Island. He granted freedom of trade, which led to settlement forming around his hunting lodge, forming an additional layer of protection against his enemies, who included Alman von Stoffen, a Hungarian ruler, and an early Bavarian Duke. [13] Although one could consider this Roman settlement as the earliest beginning of the City of Constance, the city was not named after this Constantine, but a 4th century emperor. Constantine was killed in an accident with a frightened horse and his enemies destroyed the castle and drove away most of the inhabitants of the island.
The castle was probably rebuilt subsequently. However, when the Alemanni expelled the Romans in the late 4th and early 5th centuries, the castle was destroyed again, so people would not be reminded of the hated Roman rule. [14]
Little is known about the history of the island during this period. According to legend, the island is home to a castle of Merovingian have.
In 780 Charlemagne was a guest on the island while travelling in the area.
In 1100, bishop Gebhard (III) of Constance sought refuge on the island during the Investiture Controversy. [15]
According to various sources, the island was handed over to the Dominicans in 1220, and in 1234 was assigned as a location to build a monastery by an order of the prince bishop Heinrich von Tanne of Constance. The monastery was established in 1236. [12] [16] [17]
The Chapter House, 25 m north of the monastery, was built long before the founding of the monastery. [18] The first chapter house in the world was built in Worcester in 1110.
Around 1300, the mystic and poet Heinrich Suso was born in Constance. He became a friar at the Dominican convent on the island.
At the beginning of the Council of Constance, from 6 December 1414 to 24 March 1415, Jan Hus, considered the first Church reformer as he lived before Martin Luther, Calvin and Zwingli, was held in the dungeon of the monastery. This was in the basement of the round tower on the eastern side, overlooking the lake, next to the Dominicans' dining room. During the Council, the French delegation was housed in the chapter house.
In 1507 Maximilian I organized celebrations in the garden on the island during the Diet of Constance. [15] From 1528 to 1549, the convent was used by the city of Constance as a temporary hospital. It was then returned to the friars. In 1633, during the Thirty Years' War, the Swedish fleet attacked the island. [15]
In 1785 the friars were finally driven from the island by the Austrian Emperor Joseph II, because a thriving industry was closer to his heart than the mendicant friars. On 26 July 1785 the last Mass was celebrated in the church on the island, and the convent closed the following the day. Other monasteries in the area were also closed. [19]
Lake Constance refers to three bodies of water on the Rhine at the northern foot of the Alps: Upper Lake Constance (Obersee), Lower Lake Constance (Untersee), and a connecting stretch of the Rhine, called the Seerhein. These waterbodies lie within the Lake Constance Basin in the Alpine Foreland through which the Rhine flows. The nearby Mindelsee is not considered part of Lake Constance. The lake is situated where Germany, Switzerland, and Austria meet. Its shorelines lie in the German states of Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria; the Swiss cantons of St. Gallen, Thurgau, and Schaffhausen; and the Austrian state of Vorarlberg. The actual locations of the country borders within the lake are disputed.
Radolfzell am Bodensee is a town in the state of Baden-Württemberg, Germany, located at the western end of Lake Constance, approximately 18 km (11 mi) northwest of the city of Konstanz (Constance). It is the third largest town, after Konstanz and Singen, in the district of Konstanz.
Konstanz is a Landkreis (district) in the south of Baden-Württemberg on the German-Swiss border, situated along the shores of Lake Constance. Neighboring districts are Schwarzwald-Baar, Tuttlingen, Sigmaringen and Bodenseekreis. To the south it borders the Swiss cantons of Zurich, Thurgau and Schaffhausen. The municipality of Büsingen am Hochrhein is an exclave of Germany surrounded by Swiss territory.
Garsten Abbey is a former Benedictine monastery located in Garsten near Steyr in Upper Austria. Since 1851, the former monastery buildings have accommodated a prison.
Adolf Benda was a Bohemian regional historian, council administrator and glass and jewelry craftsman. A glass engraver by trade, he was also a prominent figure in public and social life in Jablonec. He served on the board of directors of the council and the Duchcov-Podmokly Railway. Benda is best known as the author of the Geschichte der Stadt Gablonz und ihrer Umgebung, which was published in 1876–77.
Julius Tandler was an Austrian physician and Social Democratic politician, whose research secured him a lasting place in the history of anatomy. His main claim to fame was his ambition to introduce a comprehensive system of public health and social services in the Vienna municipality in the interwar years.
Peter Thumb was an Austrian architect and master builder whose family came from Bezau, Vorarlberg, in the westernmost part of Austria. He was active in Baden, the Black Forest, Alsace, Upper Swabia, on and around Lake Constance, and in Switzerland. He is best known for his Rococo architecture, mainly in Southern Germany. Outstanding examples of his work include the pilgrimage church at Birnau on Lake Constance and the monastery library at the Abbey of Saint Gall, Saint Gallen, Switzerland.
Stadttheater Konstanz is a theatre in Konstanz, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, whose history dates from 1607. The theatre operates three venues, Municipal Theatre (Stadttheater), Workshop (Werkstatt) and Hall of Mirrors (Spiegelhalle).
Philipp II was Count of Hanau-Münzenberg from 1512 until his death. He was the son of Count Reinhard IV and his wife, Katharina of Schwarzburg-Blankenburg.
Balthasar of Hanau-Münzenberg was a posthumous son of Count Reinhard IV of Hanau-Münzenberg and his wife Countess Catherine of Schwarzburg-Blankenburg.
Max Pollux Toeppen, surname sometimes spelled Töppen was a German historian and educator.
Rupert Huter was an Austrian clergyman and botanist.
The Dominican Monastery is a former Christian monastery in Frankfurt am Main. It is the seat of Protestant Regional Association, a group of Protestant congregations and deaneries in the city, and serves as the convention site for the Synod of the Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau, held usually twice a year. The former monastery compound includes a Lutheran church building, called the Church of the Holy Spirit.
The Predigerkloster was a monastery of the Dominican Order, established around 1234 and abolished in 1524, in the imperial city of Zürich, Switzerland. Its church, the Predigerkirche, is one of the four main churches in Zürich and was first built in 1231 as a Romanesque church of the then Dominican monastery. In the first half of the 14th century it was converted, the choir between 1308 and 1350 rebuilt, and a for that time unusually high bell tower built, regarded as the highest Gothic edifice in Zürich.
Weesen Abbey is a monastery of Dominican nuns located in Weesen in the Canton of St. Gallen, Switzerland. The Dominican convent is located at the foot of a terraced hillside in the middle of the town of Weesen on the effluence of the Maag respectively Linth from Walensee. Established in 1256, Weesen is the oldest Dominican friary of nuns in Switzerland. The buildings and the library respectively archives are listed in the Swiss inventory of cultural property of national and regional significance.
Villingen (Schwarzwald) station is one of two stations in Villingen-Schwenningen in the German state of Baden-Württemberg. The other is Schwenningen (Neckar). In addition, there are five more halts (Haltepunkte). The station is located east of the old town of Villingen beyond the Brigach. It is located at 704 metres above sea level on the Black Forest Railway and it is the terminus of the Rottweil–Villingen railway.
The Stadt Zürich was a Swiss steamship, built in 1855, that plied Lake Constance. She was given the nickname Teufelsschiff because she was involved in three serious collisions with other craft and was said to have sunk more German ships than the Danish navy during the Second Schleswig War.
Friedrichshafen Hafen station is a station in Friedrichshafen in the German state of Baden-Württemberg. It was opened on 1 June 1850 and served as a port station for the train ferry over Lake Constance to Romanshorn until 1976 and is still used for passenger services by Deutsche Bahn and Bodensee-Oberschwaben-Bahn (BOB). Today Friedrichshafen Hafen station is administered as a part of the Friedrichshafen Stadt station (Stadtbahnhof), to which it is connected by the Friedrichshafen Stadt–Friedrichshafen Hafen railway.
Friedrich Uhlhorn was an honorary professor at the Philipps-Universität Marburg, whose scientific focus was on the history of the State of Hesse and was also known for his work outside Hesse. His special scientific interest was mainly focused on the problems of historical cartography. In collaboration with Edmund Ernst Stengel, he published the Geschichtlichen Atlas von Hessen, which is considered his major work. He also wrote the article Die deutschen Territorien. A: The West, which deals with the West German regional history. Likewise he was responsible as editor for the Hessisches Jahrbuch für Landesgeschichte by Bruno Gebhardt.
The Südwestdeutsche Philharmonie Konstanz is a professional classical orchestra, based in Konstanz on Lake Constance.