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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: COM-COR |
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CONSTANCE , convent, on an island east of the town, is now turned into a hotel, but the buildings (especially the cloisters) are well pre-served. The 14th century Kaufhaus (warehouse for goods) was the scene of the conclave that elected Martin V., but the council really sat in the cathedral church. The town- hall
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Constance owes its fame, not to the Roman station that existed here, but to the fact that it was a bishop's see from the 6th century (when it was transferred hither from Vindonissa, near Brugg, in the Aargau) till its suppression in 1821, after having been secularized in 1803 and having lost, in 18141815, its Swiss portions. The bishop was a prince of the Holy Roman Empire, while his diocese was one of the largest in Germany, including (shortly before the Reformation) most of Baden and Wurttemberg, and 12 out of the 22 Swiss cantons (all the region on the right bank of the Aar, save the portions included in the diocese of Coire)in it were comprised 350 monasteries, 176o benefices and 17,000 priests. It was owing to this important position that the see city of the diocese was selected as the scene of the great reforming council, 14141418 (see below), which deposed all three rival popes, elected a new one, Martin V., and condemned to death by fire John Huss (6th of July 1415) and Jerome of Prague (23rd of May 1416). In 1192 (some writers say in 1255) the city became an imperial free city, but the bishop and his chapter practically ruled it till the time of the Reformation. Constance is the natural capital of the Thurgau, so that when in 146o the Swiss wrested that region from the Austrians, the town and the Swiss Confederation should have been naturally drawn
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See S. J. Capper, The Shores and Cities of the Bodensee (London, ,881); G. Gsell-Fels, Der Bodensee (Munich, 1893); Bruckmann's illustrierte Reisefuhrer; E. Issel, Die Reformation in Konstanz (Freiburg i/B., 1898) ; F. X. Kraus, Die Kunstdenkmaler des Kreises Konstanz (Freiburg i/B., 1887) ; J. Laible, Geschichte der Stadt Konstanz (Konstanz, 1896) ; A. Maurer, Der Ubergang der Stadt Konstanz an das Haus Osterreich (Frauenfeld, 1904). (W. A. B. C.) End of Article: CONSTANCE If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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