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Middelburg Abbey : ウィキペディア英語版
Middelburg Abbey

Middelburg Abbey (''The Abbey of our Lady'') is a former Premonstratensian abbey in Middelburg. At one time it was the centre of a large monastic complex.〔(Middelburg Abdij ) su Info Middelburg〕
Today parts of what survives are used for a museum〔Harmans, Gerard M.L. (a cura di), ''Olanda'', Dorling Kindersley, London, 2005 - Mondadori, Milano, 2003〕 and as offices. Located approximately 65 km (40 mies) west of Bergen op Zoom, Middelburg is the principal town and regional capital of Zeeland in the Netherlands.
==History==
The origins of the abbey go back to the early twelfth century or earlier. Premonstratensian monks arrived from St. Michael's Abbey, Antwerp in 1127, creating a monastery on the site of a former Carolingian stronghold.〔Gambaro, Cristina, ''Olanda'', Giunti, Firenze, 2003, p. 132〕 The monks established a large religious foundation, eventually incorporating two churches. The monastic foundation also held extensive lands on Walcheren (then an island) and in Zeeland.
In 1401 the abbey was brought under direct papal control. Many of the monastic buildings were destroyed in a fire in 1492. Another fire, in 1568 was focused on the two monastic churches. Today many of the surviving buildings from the monastic period (including the so-called "new church") are in the late Medieval Gothic style, and date from a rebuilding in the second part of the sixteenth century.
An important sixteenth century abbot was Nicolaas van der Borcht who in 1559 became the first bishop in the newly formed (and short-lived) Diocese of Middelburg.
Monastic life came to an end in 1574 when the Spanish defenders under Cristóbal de Mondragón capitulated to the (protestant) Dutch separatists at the end of the two year Siege of Middelburg. While negotiating the surrender of the town William of Orange had given guarantees that the clergy would be left alone, but both the abbey and Roman Catholicism in Middelburg were nevertheless forcibly terminated.
Meanwhile the abbey was renamed as the ''"Hof van Zeeland"'' and taken over for use in the secular administration of the province. Initially it was used as the seat of the district assembly (''"Staten van Zeeland"'') and for other administrative bodies including the locally important admiralty (naval) department, a mint, and a court chamber. Following extensive administrative reforms during the Napoleonic occupation, in 1812 the former abbey complex became known as the "Province Building" (''"Provinciehuis"''). The abbey church was badly damaged in May 1940 by German aerial bombers targeting Middelburg in order to persuade the Dutch army not to hold out against German invasion: during the years of austerity that followed the war rebuilding was not completed till 1965. Other abbey buildings continued to accommodate government activities till the end of the twentieth century, such as the land registry and state archive. Since 1972 a part of the complex has housed the , and in 1986 the "Roosevelt Study Center" moved into another part.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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