Count
Hugo I of Werdenberg-Heiligenberg, who had granted rights to
Bludenz in 1274, left the right of patronage to St. Peter's Church to the
Augustinian nuns of
Ottenbach near
Zürich. The monastic community changed leadership from the Augustinians to the Dominicans. The convent was a pilgrimage site and granted indulgences to visitors. The building of the convent began in 1286 and was completed in 1354. The convent served as a school for the daughters of noble families of Walgau
Rhine Valley, and later also to the bourgeois families of the region. In 1560 the
plague raged in Bludenz. Almost all of the nuns died from disease. The convent remained closed and deserted for sixteen years. The original building was burned in a fire in 1552 and again in 1576. The present buildings were built in the early eighteenth century and expanded in 1721, 1723, and 1730. In 1796 the
Tyrolese Landvogt
Ignaz Anton von Indermauer was murdered inside the convent by members of a peasant revolt. From 1805 to 1814 a military hospital was run in the convent. The convent was closed in 1941 by
Nazi Germany. In 1945 it was officially abolished, and a hospital for occupied French troops was set up in one of the school buildings. In 1997 the convent church was restored and inaugurated as a Catholic community again. == See also ==