The monastery arose in the 8th century, at a time when Italian
monasticism was flourishing. The monks who lived there were specially brought in from
Montecassino so that they could spread the
Benedictine rule in that area as well. The abbots were bestowed with numerous royal and papal concessions that increased the prestige of the Lenese monastery during the
Middle Ages and made it an important cultural, economic, religious and, for the surrounding municipalities, political center. The abbey reached the peak of its development in the 11th century, which was followed by a gradual decline of the monastic complex and its prestige. With the introduction of the
commendation in 1479, a second period of the monastery's existence began, characterized by the new type of jurisdiction of the
commendatory abbots, but which nonetheless saw the continuation of the downward spiral that would stop only in 1783, the year of the demolition of the monastic complex. Over the centuries, the abbey church as well as the monastery itself were rebuilt several times following fires and other serious damage endured, with the result that its architectural structure became increasingly distant from the original Desiderian one.
Origins The years preceding the foundation of the Leno monastery were marked by the struggle for the Lombard throne, sparked by the death of
Aistulf, between Desiderius,
duke of Tuscia, and
Ratchis, Aistulf's brother. The duke, at first at a disadvantage, sought the support of the
Franks and the papacy by promising the latter territories in
Emilia and the
Marches. To endear himself even more to the
Papal State, he promoted important monastic initiatives, especially in the
North, allocating large amounts of money to the various monastic orders and also founding new religious buildings, as in the case of the Abbey of San Benedetto in Leno and the monastery of Santa Giulia in Brescia. The Abbey of Leno would have sprung up on the site of the town of the same name, which had begun to be established thanks mainly to the building of a parish church, dedicated to the Baptist; the construction work ended shortly after the accession to the throne of Desiderius (758), who, in addition to attending the inauguration ceremony in the company of his
consort and a large group of bishops, provided it with a substantial real estate patrimony, which included property scattered throughout eastern Lombardy, on
Lake Como and 58 towns or fiefdoms (including
San Martino dall'Argine) located in the Brescia, Cremona, Milan and Mantua areas. The monastery was built next to a pre-existing church, dedicated to the
Savior, the
Virgin Mary and the
Archangel Michael, in which the friars would officiate masses and preserve relics. These, which had been brought to the Brescia area by a group of twelve monks, initiators of the Lenese monastic experience and coming directly from
Monte Cassino, included the radium of the order's initiating saint, Benedict, and the remains of
Saints Vitalis and Martialis, donated by the pope to Desiderius and donated by him to the new monastery. , with which the Leno abbey maintained contact In 774, upon the collapse of Lombard hegemony in
Italy at the hands of the
Franks, the monastery experienced moments of concern over the demise of the founding monarch, but it was soon realized that the foreign king,
Charlemagne, as defender of
Christianity had every interest in preserving the integrity of the monastic entities, so much so that he granted the abbots of Leno control over the court, now
Mantuan, of
Sabbioneta. Over the years the real estate of the monastery grew more and more not only through donations made by people close to the imperial court, but also and especially through bequests from private individuals. Already at the beginning of the ninth century, the Abbey of Leno appeared to be linked by economic and spiritual relations to the far more famous transalpine one of
Reichenau, located near
Constance, and was soon elevated to the rank of
imperial abbey, as evidenced by the appointment of Abbot Remigio as
arch-chancellor to Emperor
Louis II. The same ruler, by the explicit intervention of his official abbot, reconfirmed to the Benedictine community the property bestowed by its ancestors, exempted it from paying taxes, and decreed that the brethren could directly elect the rector of the abbey, collect and withhold tax levies from their landed estates; the diploma also provided that no man outside the abbot could judge a resident in the monastery's domains.
Splendor '' from the
Carolingian stuccoes of the Santa Giulia Museum, possibly from Leno Abbey, now on display at the Santa Giulia Museum in Brescia In the 10th century, marked by the repeated incursions of the
Hungarians into Italy, the monks of Leno ensured that the area around the abbey was fortified with palisades and towers and girdled the
curtis of
Gottolengo. In 938 the monastery's possessions were further expanded with the inclusion of
Gambara. Twenty years later, with the diplomas of
Berengar II and
Adalbert II, the vast Benedictine possessions ranged from the
province of Verona to the
Comacchio Valleys and from the
Modena area to the
Brescian area. The list of possessions also included
curtis Bonzaga, today's
Gonzaga in the
province of Mantua. In 983 there was the first occupation of the monastery by a band of local brigands, who were driven back by the intervention of
Otto III. In 999 the first papal bull, that of
Sylvester II, was issued, granting the monastery the regime of
libertas, already established in previous royal and imperial provisions, enriched the possessions by including the court of Panzano, and confirmed the abbot's right to appeal to any bishop, thus avoiding recourse to the
Brescian diocese for the consecration of the
chrism and monks. The 11th century was the abbey's heyday. In 1014, Henry II's diploma represented for the monastery of St. Benedetto the largest list of possessions ever recorded, with estates scattered over as many as ninety-five localities throughout the northern region. Five years later Abbot Odone incorporated the reformed rules of the
Cluniacs, who were also spreading in the Brescian area at that time, as evidenced by the building of the Abbey of Rodengo-Saiano in the middle of the century. In 1030, disagreements with the Brescia
cathedra began to escalate because of the bishop's attempts to substitute himself for the spiritual and later also the temporal jurisdiction of the abbot. In 1078
Pope Gregory VII forbade any layman to take possession of the monastery and administer the lands without the abbot's permission, and also confirmed the fiscal and religious privileges and prerogatives of the brethren. The ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the wealthy Abbey of Leno apparently extended beyond the boundaries of its own territory and came, around 1107, to include the Benedictine monastery of St. Thomas the Apostle in
Acquanegra, a territory located between the
Chiese and the
Oglio, which the monks had reclaimed.
Decadence In the following century began the downward spiral of the Benedictine monastery, a process that would lead to its cession
in commendam in the late 15th century. After a period of relative quiet, around 1135 the monastery was destroyed by a fire, presumably caused by arson. In 1144 there is a record of interference by the Brescian diocese in the affairs of the abbey, when the cathedra installed one of its provosts in the parish of
Gambara, at the time directly dependent on the abbot of Leno. while it seems that during 1148
Pope Eugene III stayed at length in the monastery, a fact in which it is possible to glimpse an attempt by Abbot Onesto to reaffirm the role of the monastery. The papal measure of
Adrian VI (1156), which restored prestige to the abbey at the expense of the Brescian diocese and attributed important privileges to the abbots, is also part of this revival. Meanwhile, the fragmentation of the abbatial
dominatus gradually began to materialize with the transmission of administrative power over a variety of conspicuous properties in the north to numerous
feudal lords; the first communal entities that were becoming established around the monastery, including Gottolengo, Gambara,
Ghedi (1196), as well as Leno itself, were instead making their first claims for autonomy from the abbey's jurisdiction. For nearly two decades the monastery, which was also burned, endured the military campaigns of
Frederick Barbarossa, but the latter, at the end of his clashes with the municipalities of the
Lombard League, granted the monks, who had sided with him, an important diploma, an ephemeral reconfirmation of the monastery's power. It is a judicial deposition of Montenario, canon of the abbey in those years, reported in ''Dell'antichissima badia di Leno'' published in 1767 by
Francesco Antonio Zaccaria, of which, however, the original has not survived. The 12th century ended with the rectorate of Gonterio, a man trusted by the emperor, who carried out a total reconstruction of the abbey church in an attempt to reaffirm the prestige of the Order in Leno. The thirteenth century opened dramatically with an uprising of the people of Leno, who succeeded in seizing the monastery by driving out the monks, who, however, managed by force of arms to regain it in 1209. In the same year, Abbot Onesto decided to build a new hospital, dedicated to
St. Bartholomew and
St. Anthony, run by the Benedictines, for the use of the community. Numerous land sales were implemented to deal with economic debts, and in 1212 the
Holy See delegated the
bishop of Cremona, Sicardo, as curator of the economic affairs of the Leno monastery. There followed Epifanio's long abbacy, which left not only the finances but also the abbey's books and sacred objects in such a deplorable state that the pope had to intervene and deposed him in the 1330s. In the following years, characterized by the struggle between the
Guelphs and Ghibellines, the abbots of Leno sided sometimes on one side and sometimes on the other, accentuating more and more the misery of the monastic community, which increasingly resorted to rents and sales to support itself, further squandering its now diminished land holdings. In the following century, jurisdictional and fiscal disputes between the monastery and the community of Leno increased, while the abbey's misery was further increased by a raid by the
Visconti in 1351. This was followed by the long abbacy of Andrea di Taconia, from
Prague and chaplain to
Charles IV, who held the fortunes of the abbey by balancing himself through various hardships in an attempt to at least maintain its prestige and dignity. The abbot often stayed away from Leno, so much so that the seat was occupied by two usurpers: one of these, Ottobono, after the death of the Bohemian abbot (1408) teamed up with the Venetians during the conquest of Bresciano, and when the city was conquered by the
Serenissima he obtained from the
doge and the
pope the leadership of the Lenese monastery (1434), confirmed, in the same year, by an important
papal bull. In 1451, upon Ottobono's death,
Bartolomeo Averoldi became abbot. He first (1471) intertwined contacts with the reformed Congregation of Santa Giustina of Padua, in an attempt to counter the fall of the Monastery of San Benedetto di Leno and aggregate it with the Congregation, as the Brescian Abbey of Sant'Eufemia had already done; then, more interested in personal advancement than in the welfare of the Benedictine community, in exchange for the
archbishopric of Split, with the pope's approval he gave the Lenese monastery in commendation in 1479 to the Venetian nobleman
Pietro Foscari. This event sanctioned the final end of Leno's hegemonic role as an imperial monastery and opened the door to a further slow decline of the monastic community.
The end ,
commendatory abbot of Leno Abbey After the cession in commendation of the monastery, mostly figures from the Venetian and Brescian nobility, such as the
Foscari, Vitturi and Martinengo families, ruled its fortunes. The
commendatory abbots were mostly interested in the titles they received with their appointment as abbot rather than by the actual organization of monastic life, also with regard to the fact that they often simultaneously exercised the office of bishop or other important
prelatures, thus leaving the monastery to its own devices. Case in point was the Abbey of Girolamo Martinengo (1529–1567), who had new rooms built for the monks and tenements for work use and planted, presumably, a vineyard. Meanwhile, quarrels continued between the Benedictine community and the local townships, particularly Ghedi, over the jurisdiction of numerous lands for agricultural use, which often resulted in the victory of the townships. Testifying to the poor state of the monastery are the directives issued by
Charles Borromeo following the apostolic visitation that occurred in March 1580, which required the floor to be levelled, the
tabernacle to be maintained, a
crucifix to be provided, and the church to be painted. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the direction of the abbey was still the prerogative of
Venetian patricians such as the Basadonna,
Morosini,
Barbarigo, and
Querini families. In particular,
Angelo Maria Querini, who held the position of commendatory abbot in the first half of the 18th century, limited himself only to receiving the income derived from the monastery (about 260
gold florins) and, while the
Queriniana Library was being set up in Brescia on his initiative, he did not care at all to safeguard the copious Lenese archives and let the abbey buildings fall into ruin. In 1758 Marcantonio Lombardi was appointed commendatory abbot and commissioned
Francesco Antonio Zaccaria to make a thorough historical and architectural survey about the Lenese monastery. The scholar's work was published in Venice in 1767 under the title ''Dell'antichissima badia di Leno''. Meanwhile, in 1759 a collection of bulls and diplomas addressed to the Leno monastery by Giovanni Ludovico Luchi had been published. Lombardi was to be the last abbot in the abbey's history: upon his death (1782), the remaining assets of the monastic institute were forfeited by the Republic of Venice, which, finding itself in a period of difficulty, tried to finance itself by abolishing the commendations, and in the following year, 1783, by senatorial decree the abbey was officially declared abolished. The now former monastery was purchased, along with the land on which it stood, by the Dossi family, who asked and obtained permission from the Venetian government to proceed with the demolition of the abbey buildings: the site became a strip quarry for work on the construction of the new St. Peter's Parish Church. Thus ended the history of the abbey, which had lasted just over a millennium. The Dossi family then built a villa near the ancient monastery and kept the land as a meadow; the villa was in turn demolished in 1873 and replaced by the present Villa Badia. == Archaeological excavations ==