Gregory Brown
513 Agnes Arnold Hall
Department of Philosophy
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3004

Fulda

City, Hesse Land (state), central Germany, situated on the Fulda River between the Rhön and Vogelsberg mountains. It developed around a Benedictine abbey founded in 744 by Sturmi, a disciple of St. Boniface. The abbey became a missionary centre, and its school was one of Europe's important seats of learning during the early Middle Ages, after Rabanus Maurus became its director in 803. It employed 12 manuscript copyists, and its great library survived until the 17th century. Fulda was chartered in 1157 and became a prince-abbacy; it was converted to a prince-bishopric when its abbot acquired the rank of bishop in 1752. It was the seat of a university during 1734–1803. The principality was secularized in 1802, passed to Hesse-Kassel in 1815, and was annexed by Prussia in 1866.

Most of the noteworthy buildings form an integrated Baroque district, including the cathedral (1704–12; with the crypt of St. Boniface); the episcopal palace (1707), now the city hall and museum; and the Orangery, before which stands the Floravase (1728), carved out of a single piece of stone. The Church of St. Michael dates from about 820, and the Probstei Church at Petersburg (just outside Fulda) is also 9th century. The Frauenberg Franciscan monastery (rebuilt 1760) is to the north of the city. Adolphseck Castle (1730–50) nearby, a former summer residence of the prince-bishops, is now a museum. The Land library contains a number of books from the monastic library. Fulda is the administrative centre for the neighbouring Hessische Rhön nature park.

Fulda is a substantial banking and financial centre. The major manufactures are textiles and clothing. Pop. (1989 est.) 54,320.

Copyright © 1994-2002 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Sources

  • Encylopedia Britannica 2002, Expanded Edition DVD

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