Princely abbeys and imperial abbeys
The distinction between a princely abbey and an imperial abbey was related to the status of the abbot: while both prince-abbots and the more numerous imperial abbots sat on the ecclesiastical bench of the College of ruling princes of the Imperial Diet, prince-abbots cast an individual vote while imperial abbots cast only a curial (collective) vote alongside his or her fellow imperial abbots and abbesses. Eight princely abbeys (including similar status priories) and roughly 40 imperial abbeys survived up to the mass secularisation of 1802–03 when they were all secularized. The head of an Imperial abbey was generally an Imperial abbot (''Reichsabt'') or Imperial abbess (''Reichsäbtissin''). (The head of a ''Reichspropstei''—an Imperial provostry or priory—was generally a ''Reichspropst''). Collectively, Imperial abbots, provosts and priors were formally known as ''Reichsprälaten'' (Imperial Prelates). A small number of the larger and most prestigious establishments had the rank of princely abbeys (''Fürstsabtei''), and were headed by a prince-abbot or a prince-provost (''Fürstabt'', ''Fürstpropst''), with status comparable to that of Prince-Bishops. Most however were imperial prelates and as such participated in a single collective vote in the Imperial Diet as members of the Bench of Prelates, later (1575) divided into the Swabian College of Imperial Prelates and the Rhenish College of Imperial Prelates. Despite their difference of status within the Imperial Diet, both the Imperial Prelates and the Prince-Abbots exercised the same degree of authority over their principality. Some abbeys, particularly in Switzerland, gained the status of princely abbeys (''Fürstsabtei'') during the Middle Ages or later but they either didn't have a territory over which they ruled or they lost that territory after a short while. This was the case with Kreuzlingen, Allerheiligen, Einsiedeln, Muri and Saint-Maurice abbeys. One major exception was the large and powerful Abbey of St. Gall which remained independent up to its dissolution during the Napoleonic period, despite the fact that, as a Swiss abbey, it had stopped taking part in the Imperial Diet and other institutions of the Holy Roman Empire once the independence of the Swiss Confederacy was recognized in 1648. Elsewhere, the Prince-Abbot ofLists of Imperial abbeys
List of Imperial abbeys with seat and voice at the Imperial Diet of 1792
The following list includes the Imperial abbeys which had seat and voice at the Imperial Diet of 1792. They, along with the two Teutonic Order commanderies whose commanders ranked as prelates, are listed according to their voting order on the two Benches of Prelates of the Diet.G. Benecke, ''Society and Politics in Germany, 1500-1750'', Routledge & Kegan Paul and University of Toronto Press, London, Toronto and Buffalo, 1974, Appendix III. Not shown are the abbeys of Stablo, Kempten and Corvey, whose abbots had princely status and sat on the Ecclesiastical Bench of the College of Ruling Princes. For additional information on individual abbeys, see: ''List A: Imperial abbeys named in the Matrikel'' below this list.Bench of Swabian Prelates
Bench of Rhineland Prelates
List A: Imperial abbeys named in the ''Matrikel''
The religious houses listed here as List A are those named in the ''Matrikel'', or lists of those eligible to vote in the Imperial Diet, including those whose votes were collective rather than individual. Three of these lists survive and are accessible, from 1521, 1755 (or thereabouts) and 1792. This list includes the Principalities, Imperial abbeys (''Reichsabteien'' and ''-klöster''), Imperial colleges (''Reichsstifte''), Imperial provostries or priories (''Reichspropsteien'') and the single Imperial charterhouse (''Reichskartause''). The word "Stift", meaning a collegiate foundation or canonry, possibly belonging to a variety of different orders or to none at all, and either with or without rules and vows, for either men ("Herrenstift") or for women (Abbreviations
* Description and Imperial status column: ** RA stands for ''Reichsabtei'' (Imperial abbey) ** RF stands for "Reichsfürstentum" (Imperial Principality) ** RP stands for "Reichspropstei" (Imperial provostry) * Lost imm. column: ** imm. Imperial immediacy ** Sec. secularised ** Med. mediatised ** Switz. Switzerland ** Hel. Helvetic Republic * College column: ** RC stands for "Rhenish College" ** SC stands for "Swabian College" ** RF stands for "Reichsfürst", i.e., the head of the house in question had an individual seat and voice in the Imperial Diet; there were ten of these (Fulda, Kempten, Ellwangen, Murbach-Lüders, Berchtesgaden, Weissenburg, Prüm, Stablo-Malmedy, Corvey and St. Gall).List B: ''Reichsmatrikel'' 1521
The ''Matrikel'' of 1521 included a number of religious houses which have not been identified: Inclusion in the 1521 ''Reichsmatrikel'' is not by itself conclusive evidence that a particular religious house was in fact an Imperial abbey, and the status of the following abbey listed in the ''Matrikel'' is questionable in the absence of further confirmation from other sources:List C: Imperial abbeys not named in the ''Matrikel''
For a variety of reasons a quantity of religious houses that possessed, or claimed, the status of Imperial immediacy either did not attend the Imperial Diet, or were not listed in the surviving Matrikel. The following list is very far from complete, and possibly some of those listed may not in fact have been immediate (''reichsunmittelbar'').References and notes
Bibliography
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