Origin of the monastery The history of Einsiedeln Abbey starts with Meinrad of Einsiedeln. Born in 797 in Sulchen, he was educated at the abbey school on
Reichenau Island in what is today Germany. Meinrad became a monk and was later
ordained a priest. After gaining public attention for reportedly performing miracles, Meinrad established a hermitage in 828 in the Einsiedeln forest of Switzerland, searching for privacy. He was murdered by two robbers in January 861. Over the next 80 years, other hermits occupied Meinrad's hermitage. In 934 Eberhard, previously Provost of
Strassburg, built the Einsiedeln abbey and church on the hermitage site, becoming its first abbot. According to legend, the church was consecrated in 948 in person by Jesus Christ in honor of his mother Mary. It was the beginning of the pilgrimage to the Chapel of the Saviour, which turned in the Middle Ages to a Marian pilgrimage. Abbot Augustine I (1600–29) led the movement to create the
Swiss Congregation of the Order of St. Benedict in 1602. Augustine established unrelaxed observance in the abbey and promoted a high standard of scholarship and learning amongst his monks. The Einsiedeln abbey church was rebuilt by Abbot Maurus between 1704 and 1719 and the baroque ornamentation was completed in 1734. In 1798, the abbey was occupied by French revolution soldiers, losing its status as an independent
principality. The clergy could return to the monastery in 1801. On February 19, 1803, the abbey was officially reinstalled by the
Act of Mediation. However, the Chapel of Grace was only rebuilt in 1815-1817 with the remaining parts of the old structure in the neoclassical style.
19th and 20th century Because of the political uncertainties inside and outside the country in the 1840s, the Einsiedeln leadership became afraid that the abbey would be suppressed or dissolved. They sent a group of monks to southern Indiana in the United States to minister to German immigrants and develop a possible place of refuge. The monks started a new foundation, now
Saint Meinrad Archabbey in
St. Meinrad, Indiana. There are a total of five monasteries in the USA that are linked to Einsiedeln by history: •
Saint Meinrad Archabbey in St. Meinrad, Indiana •
Subiaco Abbey in Logan County, Arkansas •
St. Joseph Abbey in Saint Benedict, Louisiana •
Marmion Abbey in Aurora, Illinois • Prince of Peace Abbey in Oceanside, California A highlight in the history of the monastery was the visit of Pope John Paul II in the summer of 1984, who solemnly consecrated the new high altar in the lower choir on June 15. == Marian veneration ==