Early life Rudolph Wolter was born in Bonn, the third of twelve children born to Lorenz and Elisabeth Schuchart Wolter. His father, a brewer, was Catholic; his mother Protestant. Rudolph was baptized in the Catholic Collegiate Church. Five of his siblings chose a religious profession; two, Karl and Ernst, became Benedictine monks. He attended the Royal Gymnasium in Bonn, and in 1844 began studies in philology, philosophy and theology at the
Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms University. In 1849 Rudolf Wolter entered the seminary in Cologne. After being ordained on September 3, 1850, he took up his first position as vicar and rector of the new general higher city school in
Jülich. There he founded the first German Catholic workers' association (Jülicher-Kranken- Arbeiter-Verein). In 1852 he passed the state examination for teaching at a grammar school in
Münster. In 1854, he was transferred to the higher Stiftsschule in
Aachen, where his brother Ernst was already teaching. The two shared an apartment until Ernst Wolter entered the Roman Benedictine
Abbey of St. Paul Outside the Walls in 1855, In the summer of 1859, he stayed in Tivoli for a cure. There he was introduced to
Katharina von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, who had just fled the novitiate of the Roman nunnery of Sant'Ambrogio after a poison attack on her life. The princess confided in the monk in confession. He instructed her to report it to the Holy Office. This set in motion an investigation. Abbot Maurus was also one of the founders of the
Beuron Art School. In 1872, St. Martin Abbey established a priory at
Maredsous. Placidus became prior in 1874, and abbot in 1878. With the implementation of the Prussian law of May 31, 1875 against all Catholic orders and congregations that were not active in nursing, on December 3, 1875, the monastery had to be closed. Maurus Wolter moved to
Volders in Austria with most of the monks. Princess von Hohenzollern managed the buildings and lands during their absence until the monks could return in 1887. Upon Maurus' death in 1890, Placidus succeeded him as abbot at Beuron. ==Works==