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==> Land/Country="HU"   Bundesland/State="Gyõr-Moson-Sopron"
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==> 1 Einträge gefunden / entries found

Benedictine Abbey
HU-9090 Pannonhalma / Martinsberg (Gyõr-Moson-Sopron)

Google Maps
 
Kontakt / Contact:

Fax.: +36 (96) 57 0192

Info: (36) (96) 57 0 191
info@osb.hu
http://www.bences.hu/...
 
Lage/How to reach
The Archabbey can be easily accessed with your own vehicle as well as by means of public transport.

Car and Motorcycle

From the directions of Gyõr, Hegyeshalom, Budapest take the Highway 82 (Veszprém) exit off the M1. (There is also a roadsign on the motorway showing the direction to the Archabbey).
From the direction of Lake Balaton take Highway 82 through Veszprém.
From the direction of Székesfehérvár take Highway 81 on the Kisbér-Mezõörs route.

Car Park

The traffic route has been changed. Cars are allowed to park eighter at the main entrance of the monastery or at the Visitors' Centre. For more information, please call +36-96-570-191 or contact us by e-mail.

Bus

Scheduled buses to the abbey leave from Gyõr every day at 8.00, 10.00 and 12.00 o'clock, and on Sundays also at 14.10. There are several other buses that take you to the village of Pannonhalma, from where the abbey can be reached after a 15-minute walk uphill.

Train

Trains leaving from Gyõr for Veszprém (or Veszprémvarsány) stop at Pannonhalma station. The archabbey is two kilometres away from the railway station.

 
Allgemeine Informationen/General information
In 996 Prince Géza settled monks from Bohemia on the Sacred Mount of Pannonia. The monastery erected in honour of Saint Martin of Tours had become the eastern bridgehead of medieval European culture as the Prince intended. Even Saint Stephen (1000-1038), the first Hungarian king was a frequent guest within its walls.

Abbot Uros (1207-1243), the commissioner of the still existing church fought off the Mongols from the walls of the monastery-stronghold. In the time of Abbot Máté Tolnai Pannonhalma acquired a distinguished position among the Hungarian Benedictine monasteries and in 1541 it became an archabbey. During one and a half centuries of the Turkish Occupation, the monks, however, had to flee for shorter or longer periods of time. Only later could they start the reconstruction of the damaged buildings. During the time of Archabbot Benedek Sajghó a major baroque construction was in progress in the monastery.

The 18th century, the era of the Enlightment also influenced the life of the monasteries. The state and the monarchs judged the operation of the communities according to immediate utility, and basically they found only those orders justifiable which practised nursing and education. Since the tradition represented by the Rule of Saint Benedict does not place the emphasis on the work of the community but on community life itself, Joseph II, in 1786, supressed all the monasteries of the Hungarian Benedictine Congregation.

The order was restored in 1802 and received secondary education as its primary field of activity.

After 1945 the properties of the Order and the schools run by the Benedictines were confiscated by the communist state. From 1950 on, however, the government permitted the secondary schools in Gyõr and in Pannonhalma to function again. Even in those hard times the community remained devoted to the service of God.

The Archabbey has been engaged in the renewal of the liturgy following the guidelines of the Second Vatican Council. A workshop of monks prepares the Hungarian translation of the monastic Liturgy of Hours with tunes and melodies fitting to the Hungarian psalm texts.
Since the end of communism in Hungary, the Benedictine community of Pannonhalma, besides continuing educational work, has been trying to find funds to make it possible for them to fulfil their role in the Church and in secular life as well.

Having been constructed in diverse styles over the course of many centuries, the buildings of the monastery preserve the messages of different ages, and yet still give the impression of an harmonious unity. The artifacts that can still be seen today obtain a unique radiance due to the fact that they are being used in accordance with their original function by a living monastic community. Though the monastery is open to the public, there are nevertheless places where only the members of the monastic community are allowed to enter. Here everything seeks to serve the purpose that the centuries-old Benedictine way of life may still be nurtured by silence and prayer.

The Archabbey offers guided tours for visitors, beginning from the Reception building next to the car park. These new facilities also enable our guests to gain insight into the life of the Benedictine monastic community by viewing a fifteen-minute film.

For further information about the guided tours and other programmes of the Abbey, please contact the staff of the TriCollis Guided Tour Office of Pannonhalma Archabbey.

Hours:
21th March - 29thApril
Closed on Mondays
9 am - 4 pm

30th April - 31stMay
Open on Mondays
9 am - 4 pm

1st June - 30thSeptember
Open on Mondays
9 am - 5 pm

1st October - 11thNovember
Closed on Mondays
9 am - 4 pm

12th November - 20thMarch
Closed on Mondays
10 am - 3 pm

For a list of adjunft hotels and restaurants see http://www.bences.hu/en/vendegfogadas/szallas_etkezes

Pictures: Church and Library.
 


 
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