Founding by Otto I In 1180, Otto founded the Lehnin Abbey in Zauche as the Margraviate's first
monastery, in which he would be buried four years later. This
Cistercian monastery became the
house monastery and burial ground for the House of Ascania, and later also for the
House of Hohenzollern. The first monks took up residence in 1183, coming from the
Sittichenbach Abbey; construction of the church and
cloisters began around 1190. The monastery quickly developed into a wealthy abbey and strengthened the position of the Ascanians both by its great economic means and by the missionary work of its monks to the
Slavs. By the time the monastery was secularized in 1542, it owned among other things 39 villages and the city of
Werder.
Founding legend The abbey's founding legend is as follows. Otto fell asleep after an arduous hunt under an oak tree. In his dream, deer appeared which threatened to gore him with their antlers, and which he could not repel with his spear. In desperation Otto called
Christ's name, whereupon the dream dissolved. When Otto related the strange dream to his companions, they interpreted the deer as a symbol for the pagan Slavs, and advised him to establish a monastery in honor of the Christian God to defend against paganism. Oak and deer as a result are on the Abbey's coat of arms. ==Monument to Otto I in Berlin==