Switzerland
Abbey of St Gall
The Abbey of St Gall had a great influence on the development of monastic architecture and is considered to be a typical example of a large Benedictine monastery.
It was during the abbacy of Gozbert (816-837) that the so-called Golden Age of St. Gall began. Most impressive remains of this period are the Convent's library and archive, containing 150.000 books including numerous treasures.
Community Perspective: The Library is the unmissable part, the Abbey’s exterior is quite plain.
Site Info
Official Information
- Full Name
- Abbey of St Gall (ID: 268)
- Country
- Switzerland
- Status
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Inscribed 1983
Site history
History of Abbey of St Gall
- 1983: Inscribed
- Inscribed
- 2013: Name change
- From "Convent of St. Gall" to "Abbey of St. Gall"
- WHS Type
- Cultural
- Criteria
- ii
- iv
Links
- UNESCO
- whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org
- whc.unesco.org — whc.unesco.org/
Related Resources
- stiftsbezirk.ch — Weltkulturerbe Stiftsbezirk St.Gallen
- stibi.ch — Stiftsbibliothek St. Gallen
Community Information
- Community Category
- Religious structure: Christian
Travel Information
Recent Connections
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Perfect Inscriptions
1983 -
Depicted in Mizielinska Maps
See i.pinimg.com
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First inscriptions
Switzerland: three inscriptions in 1983…
Connections of Abbey of St Gall
- Trivia
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On Passports
On Swiss passport version 2003, on page 24 -
Depicted in Mizielinska Maps
See i.pinimg.com
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- History
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Located in a Former Capital
Convent of St. Galle is located in St. Gallen which was a capitol city of independent principality in 13th century.
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- Architecture
- World Heritage Process
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Perfect Inscriptions
1983 -
First inscriptions
Switzerland: three inscriptions in 1983 - Old City of Berne has the lowest number, but St. Gall is first mentioned in the report
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- Religion and Belief
- Human Activity
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Musical Notation
Codex St Gall is among the earliest examples of Western neumatic notation. -
Mummies
Egyptian mummy in the library of the monastery
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- Constructions
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Elevators
To the monastic library which is located on the third floor of the building -
Magic Squares
St Gallen Library, "in the far southeast corner you'll spot The Venerable Bede, a seventh-century English monk from Northumbria who wrote one of the first histories of England: he is shown as a scholar, with, beside him, a magic number square..."
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- WHS on Other Lists
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Memory of the World
One of three complete versions of the "Nibelungenlied" is saved at the Library of the Convent of St. Gall + Documentary heritage of the former Abbey of Saint Gall in the Abbey Archives and the Abbey Library of Saint Gall (2017)
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- Timeline
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Built in the 9th century
Apogee 816-837
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- WHS Hotspots
- Science and Technology
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Libraries
St. Gall Library
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- Visiting conditions
- WHS Names
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Name changes
From Convent to Abbey (2013)
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News
No news.
Recent Visitors
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Community Reviews
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This is a site with rather strange OUV which you can partially excuse or explain because it was such an early nomination:
Like the Reichenau this was one of the most important (and powerful) monasteries of medieval Europe with a great and widespread territory, one of the most important collections of manuscripts and books in the world and a famous writing workshop. It also lends its name to the most important architectural plan of the middle ages: the St. Gall monastery plan.
So far, so great. The problem is that not much of that contributes really its OUV: The church and the monastery nowadays are completely baroque and therefore not from the time when the monastery was at its peak but built far later. While this complex of buildings is grand and impressive it is in the whole not better or grander then a considerable number of great monasteries that were rebuilt in the baroque era, especially in southern Germany and Austria. The church has been restored a few years ago and I find the color scheme rather disturbing though it is supposed to refer to the original colors: While most ornaments have strange combination of turquoise and orange the large painting in the cupolas are still extremely dark like darkened by centuries of candle soot even after the restoration.
The only part that may have OUV as a building is the famous and wonderful library but even this has strong competition by a number similar baroque …
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After many years, thanks to a visit from Ian, I finally did a revisit of the abbey and its marvellous library. As mentioned in previous reviews, it is really the library the pulls this site out of mediocracy. We headed straight for the library of course. The ticket also includes the library, a museum in the basement and an exhibition room in another building. Pictures are not allowed in any of these rooms, but you really only want them from the library.
Entering the library still requires to put on slippers and there is always a knowledgeable employee present who can give you some details about the construction. A secret attraction is the mummy “Schepenese” in the far right corner. There are currently efforts by a local artist to bring the mummy back to Egypt. So visit, while she is still around.
The museum is ok, but nothing extraordinary. There is some information about Gallus, an Irish monk after whom St Gall is named. The exhibition room houses the world’s oldest monastery archive. This is actually interesting. There are documents about common problems of the time, including the separation of land between St Gall and nearby Constance.
We finished the visit in the church, which looks clearly better from the inside than the outside, before continuing to nearby Reichenau Monastic Island.
St Gall is quite a nice town, especially the monastic quarter around the abbey. While there, you should eat the St. Galler Bratwurst (eaten only …
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I visited this WHS in June 2014. Having visited quite a number of monasteries and abbeys in Europe before, I wasn't impressed by the huge complex of churches, chapels, gardens, monastery buildings, etc. especially since they seemed to be relatively new or heavily restored and my first impression was "this is just another abbey like many other on the list". However, I left the Abbey Library for last and what a pleasant surprise it was. I spent at least 2 hours gazing at the pristine library full of old parchment books, an original mummy and a sarcophagus from the Hatsheput Temple in Egypt and a replica of a gorgeous globe (the original is housed in a museum in Zurich). For 12 euros, I got the entrance ticket with the very informative audio guide, wore special footwear over my shoes to protect the wooden floor and for most of the time I had the magnificent place to myself. That said, the number of visitors at a time can be around 100, so it's best to avoid weekends, public holidays or peak hours. I could have spent more time just gazing at the wonderful library as the only downside was that of getting a stiff neck! The library alone to me has OUV and is a jem everyone should behold!
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Since ancient time Sankt Gallen, the capital city of the canton of the same name, was well known for its magnificent abbey which was one of most important monastery in this region and was on my wish list to see for a long time. During my Switzerland tour, I took the Voralpen scenic train from Lucerne to Sankt Gallen, the scenery of pre-alpine region was really pretty and I highly recommended using this train as a mean of transportation to enter the city.
From the train station, it was very easy to reach the abbey by just walk along the lovely car free shopping street until you started to notice the huge complex on your right. The complex was very large with many buildings built encircled the cathedral. Actually I was quite disappointed with the complex's exterior, apart from the cathedral; these buildings were really plain with nothing significant to mention. The unbelievable greenish lawn and the two towers of the cathedral apse were the things to see. However for cathedral's interior, I was really impressed with the beautiful Rococo style and in my opinion, the green stucco decorating the naves were very unique as I had never seen this color in Rococo decoration before.
The monastic library was another highlight of this abbey, hiding in the very plain building both exterior and interior which made me not sure that I was in the correct place, but when I worn the big slippers, for protecting the wooden floor, and entered …
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When my flight to Malta and its 3 WHS was canceled because of the volcano, I made a nice train trip instead to St. Gall in Switzerland. It is a medium-sized town with a very pleasant centre full of historic buildings and half-timbered houses. The religious complex in the immediate city centre, consisting of the cathedral and the convent, is a World Heritage Site. Both buildings have a medieval (Carolingian) origin, but were heavily rebuilt in Baroque style. Both are quite nice, but the unmissable part is the library. You can actually only visit one room, but it is full of books and manuscripts that are up to 1,200 years old. A must-see for any history buff.
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The greatest thing about St Gall is its old world-known library. It is of immense historic value and still contains unique manuscripts. Otherwise, the medieval monastery was heavily modified to suit the Baroque taste and the result I do not find that impressive.
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