Klosterkammer Hannover


The Klosterkammer Hannover, based in Hanover, is a special authority within the scope of the Lower Saxony Ministry of Science and Culture. It administers former ecclesiastical, mediatized property and maintains churches and convents. In addition, as a foundation body, it administers four independent foundations under public law.
The Klosterkammer maintains and promotes church, social and educational projects. It is one of the oldest and most traditional state authorities in Lower Saxony, whose forerunner organisation was founded in the 16th century.

History

The Klosterkammer Hannover was founded during the time of the sovereign church regiment, when state and church were still institutionally linked. It has its roots in the time of the Reformation in the Principality of Calenberg-Göttingen around 1542, when the regent Elisabeth von Calenberg ordered an inventory of the documents of the former Catholic convents, which had been converted to Protestant ladies' foundations during the Reformation. This was only carried out to a limited extent. After the reign of Elisabeth of Calenberg ended in 1545 due to the majority of her son Eric II, the reformation of the convents came to a halt, as Erich II had converted to the Catholic faith. It was only after his death in 1584, when the Principality of Calenberg-Göttingen fell to Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel in inheritance, that under Duke Julius the monastic system was reorganised according to the Wolfenbüttel Church Constitution of 1569.
The Allgemeine Hannoversche Klosterfonds, the predecessor organisation, experienced a significant increase in assets as a result of the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss 1803, when the clerical principalities of Hildesheim and Osnabrück fell to the Kingdom of Hanover in 1815. The assets of the dissolved convents were not confiscated by the state, but were transferred to the Klosterfonds. This increase in assets was the reason for the establishment of the Klosterkammer Hannover as the central authority. Prince Regent George IV set it up on 8 May 1818 to administer the former convent assets. During the time of the Prussian Province of Hanover from 1866 to 1945, the Klosterkammer, with its own President, was subordinate to the Chief President of the Province in Hanover.
Numerous former collegiate and convent churches in Lower Saxony are still owned by the Klosterkammer; they are used by Protestant and Catholic parishes as parish churches. In addition, there are extensive properties of the former convents. The president of the Klosterkammer is responsible for representing the respective prelatures at the Calenberg-Grubenhagen Landtag.

Administration and real estate

The Klosterkammer is located in the Oststadt of Hanover, not far from the Hochschule für Musik, Theater und Medien Hannover. It administers the Allgemeine Hannoversche Klosterfonds, the Domstrukturfonds Verden, the Stift Ilfeld and the Hospitalfonds St. Benedikti in Lüneburg.
The Klosterkammer has an administrative, a real estate and a building department as well as the Klosterkammer forest business, which is managed by the convent forest offices in Soltau and Westerhof, as a state enterprise. There are about 135 employees who look after the extensive foundation assets. This consists mainly of around 40,000 hectares of land with agricultural and forest areas, gravel pits, nature conservation and leisure areas. Three quarters of the Klosterkammer is financed by almost 16,000 leasehold properties. In addition, the Chamber owns about 800 buildings, most of which are listed, including the Calenberg nunneries of Barsinghausen, Mariensee, Marienwerder, Wennigsen and Wülfinghausen. Also about 10,000 works of art belong to the possession.

Activity

The administration of the four foundation assets by the Klosterkammer also includes the fulfilment of performance obligations towards numerous Protestant and Catholic parishes. In the vast majority of cases, these obligations have always been borne by the assets of the foundations, in particular the Allgemeine Hannoversche Klosterfonds. An initial list is found in Falk's memorandum of 1877, the size of which varies considerably. In the case of the parish of St. Michaelis Lüneburg, for example, the AHK is obliged to bear the entire costs of the parish, i.e. all personnel, material and building maintenance costs. In other cases, the AHK bears all or part of the parish pay and/or the construction maintenance of church buildings, rectories and cemetery chapels. In addition, the AHK provides subsidies for salaries and heating costs. Based on a contractual agreement of 1963/83 with the State of Lower Saxony, the AHK bears the performance obligation of the State of Lower Saxony towards the so-called Lüneburg abbeys, i.e. Damenstiften, Ebstorf, Isenhagen, Lüne, Medingen, Walsrode and Wienhausen. In return, the AHK was released from its obligation to pay benefits to the University of Göttingen and the excess claim was compensated by the transfer of agricultural and forestry assets. In addition, the Klosterkammer advises the convent foundations of Bassum, Börstel, Fischbeck and Obernkirchen in administrative, building and other specialist matters.
From the economic surpluses of the asset management, the Klosterkammer allocates subsidies of about three million euros annually for projects in Lower Saxony in accordance with the ecclesiastical, social and educational purpose of the foundation.

Managed abbeys and convents

Lüneburg abbeys

  1. Lüne Abbey
  2. Ebstorf Abbey
  3. Isenhagen Abbey
  4. Medingen Abbey
  5. Walsrode Abbey
  6. Wienhausen Abbey

    Calenberg abbeys

  7. Barsinghausen Abbey
  8. Mariensee Abbey
  9. Marienwerder Abbey
  10. Wennigsen Abbey
  11. Wülfinghausen Abbey

    Feldklöster (Field abbeys)

  12. Grauhof Abbey
  13. Riechenberg Abbey
  14. St Peter and Paul
  15. Lamspringe Abbey
  16. Wöltingerode Abbey

    Other

  17. Minster Church of St. Alexandri
  18. Fischbeck Abbey
  19. Obernkirchen Abbey
  20. Börstel Abbey
  21. Bassum Abbey
  22. Ilfeld Abbey with the Ilfeld abbey school and more than 1,500 hectares of forest in the Nordhausen district of Thuringia
  23. Bursfelde Abbey
  24. Marienburg castle

    Directors and Presidents