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Keywords

fortified
Cunaeus
Andreas von Keil
spa resort
Evangelical Reformed Church
Horn Bad Meinberg
Northrhine Westphalia
Evangelisch-reformierte Kirche
Louis the Pious
Bad Meinberg
Reformation
Corvey
Lippe
Nordrhein Westfalen
NRW
Germany
Johann Erhard Trampel


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Bad Meinberg - Evangelisch-reformierte Kirche

Bad Meinberg - Evangelisch-reformierte Kirche
Meinberg (since 1970 part of Horn-Bad Meinberg) was first mentioned in 978.
Meinberg is then mentioned as a spa in 1676, when Andreas von Keil (called "Cunaeus") recommends the water of the Meinberg "health well" . In 1762 Johann Erhard Trampel (1737-1817) was commissioned by Count Simon August to investigate the springs. Trampel then was the driving force behind the development of the farming village into a spa. He probably knew near Pyrmont (today Bad Pyrmont), that already had developed into a place where the "jet-set" of the time met, as there was already a casino.

In 1767, Meinberg was officially designated a "health resort" by a decree of the count; in that year. Hotels had to be built to accommodate the guests. The historic spa park was laid out in 1770.

Trampel´s successors laid the foundations for the mud spa, which proved to be a success but it took until 1900 to count 1000 spa guests in one season for the first time.

The increasing numbers of spa guests led to a building boom i the late 1950s and again in the 1970s and 1980s, when three large spa clinics were built. In 1992, the number of spa guests reached its highest level with almost 38,000. Since then, due to the structural reform in the health care system, the numbers declined sharply, and at the end of the 1990s, the three spa clinics gradually closed.

In 822, during the reign of Louis the Pious, the Corvey monastery was founded in Höxter, under the name of "Nova Corbeia". It was founded initially as a provostry of Corbie (Somme), from where the first monks came.

Monks from Corvey built the first church here, and in 978 Saxon noblemen placed their "Meierhof" under the protection of the monastery, what is the first mention of this place.

The first was probably a wooden church. It got replaced by a fortified stone building in the 12th century. From this church the nave and the fortified tower are preserved. In 1541 the parish became Lutheran, about 60 years later, the Reformation took hold in Lippe.

In 1767 the "spa business" started, so that the church became too small. In 1882 the building was extended by a single-nave annex to the south, and in 1928 to the north, resulting in the present cross shape.

Marco F. Delminho has particularly liked this photo


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