Laach Abbey was dissolved in the
secularisation of 1802. The premises became the property, first of the occupying
French, and then in 1815 of the
Prussian State. In 1820 the buildings were acquired by the
Society of Jesus, who established a place of study and scholarship here. Of particular note were Fathers
Gerhard Schneemann,
Theodor Granderath and
Florian Reiss, who produced a number of important works: the "Collectio lacensis" ("Acta et decreta sacrorum conciliorum recentiorum", 7 volumes, Freiburg, 1870–1890); the "Philosophia lacensis", a collection of learned books on the different branches of philosophy (logic, cosmology, psychology, theodicy, natural law) and published at Freiburg, 1880–1900; and, perhaps best-known, the "Stimmen aus Maria-Laach" (
"Voices from Maria Laach"), appearing from 1865, at first as individual pamphlets defending against
liberalism within the
Roman Catholic church, and from 1871 as a regular periodical. The Jesuits were obliged to leave during the
"Kulturkampf" of the 1870s. ==Second Benedictine foundation==