The former
Cistercian Kloster Ebrach was founded in 1127 as one of the first Cistercian monasteries east of the
Rhine by Berno and Richwin von Eberau,
Frankish noblemen. In 1147, twelve
monks from the mother monastery,
Morimond, moved here. In 1200, Abbot Hermann I set to work on building the
church, which was finished in 1280. It is 86 m long was built in the
Gothic style. More than 50 windows, 26
altars and, above the portal, a
rose window adorn the building. The windows were newly painted in 1887. The organ, with its 36 stops, is hailed as a masterwork. The abbey was dissolved in 1803 in the course of
Secularization. Since the
Reichsdeputationshauptschluss of 1803, the community has belonged to
Bavaria. Ebrach Abbey only fell under direct Imperial authority once it had been shut down. Until 1803, this had been successfully disputed by the
Hochstift of
Würzburg. The abbey church became a parish church. Since 1851, the abbey buildings have served as a
prison, nowadays known as
Justizvollzugsanstalt Ebrach. ==Demographics==