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Zell am Main - Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Municipality in Bavaria, Germany

Zell am Main (German pronunciation: [ˈtsɛl ʔam ˈmaɪn], lit.'Zell on the Main') is a municipality in the district of Würzburg in Bavaria in Germany, situated on the river Main.

Zell's historic main street

The town of Zell was first mentioned as Cella in 1128, in relation to the still-extant Oberzell Abbey. The municipality's patron is St. Lawrence, who is also depicted in Zell's coat of arms, and to whom the Parish Church is dedicated. For much of its history, the town's main industry was winemaking. It attained market rights in 1833. The historic center of Zell houses several townhouses of wealthy wine merchants, including one designed by Balthasar Neumann.[3]

Along with Oberzell Abbey, the municipality is also the site of Unterzell Abbey, founded in 1230. Both abbeys were secularized in the German mediatization. Before being reconsecrated and restored by the Sisters of the Holy Childhood of Jesus in 1901, the profaned Oberzell Abbey was Koenig & Bauer's first factory. Unterzell Abbey was used for a variety of purposes after its mediatization, notably, it hosted Zell's small Jewish community, composed mostly of Jews from Würzburg displaced by the Hep-Hep riots. Today, a restored Sukkah on the Klosterhof commemorates the Jewish presence in Zell. The monastery church was ruined in World War II, while the remaining buildings have been converted to housing.

The historic center of Zell is laid out along a single narrow street between the Zeller Berg and the Main. It has become dilapidated as the town has expanded north in a suburban fashion since the postwar era. Recent developments include the restoration of Unterzell Abbey and the building of a new commercial center near the postwar-era Rathausplatz.

Subprioress Renata Singer of Unterzell Abbey was burned at the stake for witchcraft in 1749, one of the last women in Europe to be executed on those charges.[4]


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