*** MONASTERY IN MSTÓW ***

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MSTÓW

fortified monastery

MONASTERY IN MSTÓW, VIEW FROM THE SOUTH WEST

HISTORY OF THE MONASTERY

DESCRIPTION OF THE MONASTERY

SIGHTSEEING


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c­cord­ing to pop­u­lar tra­di­tion, the mo­na­ste­ry in the vil­lage of Mstów was found­ed by the bish­op of Cra­cow, Iwo Odro­wąż (d. 1229), who set­tled here twelve monks tak­en from the Wro­cław ab­bey of the Blessed Vir­gin Ma­ry. His premise was to cre­ate a strong Chris­tian cul­tur­al cen­ter in the area aimed at re­duc­ing dis­or­der and rais­ing Chris­tian aware­ness among the lo­cal pop­u­la­tion. How­ev­er, link­ing the ori­gins of the mo­na­ste­ry to the Bish­op of Cra­cow is on­ly one of the his­tor­i­cal ver­sions. Ac­cord­ing to an­oth­er, the can­ons set­tled in Mstów al­ready be­fore 1145 on the ini­tia­tive of the pala­tine Piotr Wło­sto­wic (d. 1153), with the ap­proval of the Cra­cow prince Wła­dy­sław II (the Ex­ile, d. 1159) and Bish­op Ro­bert (d. 1143).



VIEW FROM THE SOUTH


In 1212, a syn­od of Pol­ish bish­ops was held in Mstów, with par­tic­i­pants in­clud­ing the arch­bish­op of Gnie­zno Hen­ryk Kie­tlicz, the bish­op of Cra­cow Iwo Odro­wąż, the bish­op of Wro­cław Waw­rzy­niec, the bish­op of Lu­bu­skie Waw­rzy­niec and the bish­op-elect of Poz­nań Pa­weł. The syn­od passed a res­o­lu­tion that dealt with the obli­ga­tion of se­cre­cy dur­ing meet­ings of chap­ter mem­bers. This was one of the first steps to­ward the cler­gy's in­de­pen­dence from sec­u­lar au­thor­i­ty.


NEXT TO THE WALLS OF THE MONASTERY

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t the be­gin­ning, the Mstów mo­na­ste­ry was a branch of the Wro­cław abbey. On­ly at an ear­ly stage of the 15th cen­tu­ry did it be­come in­de­pen­dent of Wro­cław, and the first su­pe­ri­or of the al­ready au­to­no­mous fa­cil­i­ty was Mi­ko­łaj Is­ner of Kra­ków, a rel­a­tive of Jan Is­ner (d. 1411), a pro­fes­sor of the­ol­o­gy at the Acade­my of Kra­ków. In the vicin­i­ty of the mo­na­ste­ry, the vil­lage de­vel­oped dy­nam­i­cal­ly, which in 1279 - as the first in the re­gion - re­ceived town rights. At the time, Mstów served as a bor­der cen­ter with a ford on the War­ta Riv­er and a cus­toms cham­ber, and this fact prob­a­bly had an im­pact on the de­ci­sion to build the (still wood­en) mo­na­ste­ry for­ti­fi­ca­tions. The de­fen­sive walls were bad­ly need­ed here, since in the 13th and 14th cen­turies the town re­peat­ed­ly be­came the des­ti­na­tion of plun­der­ing ex­pe­di­tions by bor­der bands and some Si­le­sian dukes.



BRICK MONASTERY FORTIFICATIONS WERE ERECTED IN THE XVII CENTURY

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c­cord­ing to me­dieval Pol­ish chron­i­cler Jan Dłu­gosz, at the be­gin­ning of the 15th cen­tu­ry Mstów had 105 farms and ex­cep­tion­al­ly good soil and cli­mate, so that grains and grass­es were bet­ter here, cat­tle were fat­ter and more beau­ti­ful, and sheep yield­ed fin­er wool than any­where in Poland. Dur­ing the reign of Louis of Hun­ga­ry (Na­gy La­jos, d. 1382), the town, to­geth­er with Ol­sz­tyn sta­ro­sty and Brzeź­ni­ca, be­came the fief of the plun­der­er La­dis­laus Opol­czyk. The num­ber of crimes of this ger­man­ized Si­le­sian prince proved so great that the im­pa­tient (King of Poland) La­dis­laus Ja­gieł­ło set out against him. Hav­ing cap­tured Ol­sz­tyn, the king, along with the Ma­zo­vian princes Jan and Zie­mo­wit, en­ter­tained a short time in the mo­na­ste­ry [...]. Ja­gieł­ło stayed here a sec­ond time in 1403, on his way to meet King Wen­ces­las of Lux­em­bourg (Vá­clav IV Lu­cem­bur­ský) of Bo­he­mia.



MONASTERY SEEN FROM THE NORTH, ON THE HORIZON YOU CAN BARELY SEE THE RUINS OF OLSZTYN CASTLE

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n the first half of the 15th cen­tu­ry, on the site of the old church, a Goth­ic ed­i­fice was built, which in 1441 gained the rank of col­le­giate church ded­i­cat­ed to the As­sump­tion of the Bles­sed Vir­gin Mary. Sev­er­al decades lat­er, the ab­bots erect­ed new monas­tic build­ings, which may have al­ready host­ed the great knights' con­ven­tion held in Mstów in 1474 on the oc­ca­sion of King Ca­si­mir Ja­giel­lon's (Ka­zi­mierz Ja­giel­loń­czyk) prepa­ra­tions for an armed ex­pe­di­tion to Hun­gary. Af­ter the king's de­par­ture to­wards Wro­cław, the ab­bey and all its do­mains looked as if af­ter a war, as the 60,000-strong ar­my had com­plete­ly eat­en all the food from the sur­round­ing vil­lages and farms. At the time, the mo­na­ste­ry housed be­tween 10 and 20 monks per­ma­nent­ly, who ran a parish school, a hos­pi­tal and a study to pre­pare ap­pli­cants for the priest­hood.



THE MONASTERY VESTIBULE, DRAWING FROM 1872

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t the be­gin­ning of the 17th cen­tu­ry, the mo­na­ste­ry gained brick for­ti­fi­ca­tions (pre­vi­ous­ly they were made of wood). How­ev­er, they proved too frag­ile to hold back the Swedish army, which in 1655, af­ter a siege of sev­er­al days, burned the town and mo­na­ste­ry build­ings, as well as com­mit­ted nu­mer­ous mur­ders of the lo­cal pop­u­la­tion. Both the wars with Swe­den and the pro­gres­sive changes in re­la­tions be­tween lo­cal cen­ters caused Mstów to lose its lead­ing po­si­tion on the eco­nom­ic map of the re­gion in the 17th cen­tu­ry, giv­ing way to Czę­sto­cho­wa, which was al­ready larg­er at the time. The re­li­gious sig­nif­i­cance of the mo­na­ste­ry al­so grad­u­al­ly mar­gi­nal­ized, due to the rapid de­vel­op­ment of the cult of the holy im­age at Ja­sna Gó­ra, lo­cat­ed near­by.



ENGRAVING FROM THE WEEKLY MAGAZINE "KŁOSY" (1876) SHOWING A FRAGMENT OF THE MONASTERY FORTIFICATIONS,
THE VESTIBULE OF THE MONASTERY AND THE "ROCK OF LOVE" LOCATED NEAR THE FORTIFIED COMPLEX

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n 1702, the monastery church burned down. In­stead of re­build­ing it, it was de­cid­ed to erect a com­plete­ly new sanc­tu­ary. When it was al­most fin­ished dis­as­ter struck - dur­ing the re­li­gious ser­vice the pil­lars of one of the naves broke, caus­ing the col­lapse of the ceil­ings and part of the walls, and the death of at least three peo­ple. The new tem­ple was fi­nal­ly con­se­crat­ed in 1748 by Fran­ci­szek Ko­biel­ski, bish­op of Łuck and chan­cel­lor of Queen Mary, wife of Au­gust III. The Baroque church re­ceived nine beau­ti­ful al­tars, of which two were fund­ed by the Con­fra­ter­ni­ty of the Ro­sa­ry.



BAROQUE CHURCH WAS BUILT IN THE FIRST HALF OF THE XVIII CENTURY

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e­gin­ning in the 18th cen­tu­ry a slow de­cline fol­lowed, both of the mo­na­ste­ry and the neigh­bor­ing town. The church burned down again in 1766 (or 1776) and in 1800. Great dam­age was al­so done here by the Rus­sian army, which passed through Mstów in 1709 and in 1768, as well as nu­mer­ous nat­u­ral dis­as­ters, like flood­ing of the War­ta Riv­er and ram­pant plagues. In 1798, the Prus­sian gov­ern­ment con­fis­cat­ed most of the mo­na­ste­ry's prop­er­ty, pay­ing in re­turn an an­nu­al com­pen­sa­tion of 25,000 zlo­tys and 250 fath­oms of fire­wood. Short­ly there­after, in 1822, the mo­na­ste­ry was abol­ished and hence­forth served as a rec­to­ry. Its last ab­bot was Fran­ci­szek Ata­na­zy Na­łęcz Tań­ski, who died in 1830.



ST. BARBARA CEMETERY CHAPEL IN THE FOREGROUND, MONASTERY IN THE DISTANCE - WOODCUT FROM 1872

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n 1914, the monastery was oc­cu­pied by the Ger­man army, which brought hur­ri­cane Rus­sian fire on it. Gre­nades de­stroyed both church tow­ers, per­fo­rat­ed the vaults, ripped off the roofs and strained the walls. Even the an­cient trees sur­round­ing the mo­na­ste­ry did not sur­vive, as most of them fell, crushed by can­non balls. Ger­man troops did not re­spect the tem­ple. Once it served them as a dor­mi­to­ry, the sec­ond time as sta­bles for hors­es. What rep­re­sent­ed any val­ue be­came their loot. They stole the lar­gest bell, pipes from the or­gan, tore off vo­tive of­fer­ings from the im­age of the Vir­gin Ma­ry, among which were beau­ti­ful beads, and even stole the church's linen.



WORLD WAR I, RUINED RECTORY (FORMER CONVENT)

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f­ter 1918, the church stood aban­doned for a long time, as there were no dare­dev­ils among the cler­gy who would have the courage to en­ter the col­laps­ing walls of the church and mo­na­ste­ry build­ing, and take o­ver the parish. It was not un­til 1960 that the lo­cal parish priest, Fa­ther Mi­chał Ma­niew­ski (d. 1963), be­gan re­build­ing the ru­ined ed­i­fices and re­con­struct­ing the 17th-cen­tu­ry for­ti­fi­ca­tion wall. His work was con­tin­ued in the 1960s and 1980s by lo­cal parish priests, among them the dis­tin­guished Fa­ther Sta­ni­sław Bo­rec­ki (d. 1990). Dur­ing this time, a trea­sure of around a thou­sand 14th-16th cen­tu­ry coins in to­tal was dis­cov­ered on and near the mo­na­ste­ry on three oc­ca­sions. In 1990 - af­ter an ab­sence of al­most 200 years - the church and mo­na­ste­ry build­ings were tak­en o­ver again by the Lat­er­an Ca­nons Reg­u­lar.




THE MONASTERY IN THE 1930S AND 1940S


CANNONS REGULAR

The Or­der's be­gin­nings can be traced back to the so-called cler­i­cal com­mu­ni­ties es­tab­lished in the Church at the ini­tia­tive of var­i­ous bish­ops at the turn of the 4th and 5th cen­turies, while its gold­en age came in the 12th and 13th cen­turies, when there were more than 2,500 cen­tres be­long­ing to this con­gre­ga­tion through­out Eu­rope. The Lat­er­an Con­gre­ga­tion, as one of the lat­er ones, was es­tab­lished in Italy at the be­gin­ning of the 15th cen­tu­ry and re­ceived pa­pal ap­proval in 1446.

The old­est Pol­ish monas­ter­ies of Canons Reg­u­lar were found­ed in Trze­mesz­no, Czer­wińsk, Wro­cław, Ka­lisz, Mstów and Ża­gań, as well as Kra­ków. Lat­er, their his­to­ry un­fold­ed in dif­fer­ent ways un­til the end of the 18th cen­tu­ry, when they slow­ly be­gan to dis­ap­pear. At pre­sent, the Or­der has five larg­er monas­ter­ies in Poland, runs 11 parish­es (Kra­ków, Ełk, Mstów, Drez­den­ko, No­we Drez­den­ko, Stra­du­ny, Nie­go­sław, Ka­mień, Rą­pin, Ki­ry, Waw­ier­ka) and the Mar­i­an Sanc­tu­ary at Gietrz­wałd.

The Or­der bases its dis­ci­pline of life on the Rule of St. Au­gus­tine, which was not one of the stric­test, nor did it de­fine spe­cif­ic pas­toral tasks, so the canons were most of­ten in­volved in pas­toral work, and to a less­er ex­tent in hos­pi­tal­i­ty and ed­u­ca­tion. Monks wear a black cas­sock on week­days and a white one on feast days.


CANONS REGULAR ON LITHOGRAPHS BY JULIUS VOLKMAR FLECK, 1848


HISTORY OF THE MONASTERY

DESCRIPTION OF THE MONASTERY

SIGHTSEEING


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he old­est, Ro­manesque church is be­lieved to have been found­ed as ear­ly as the 12th cen­tu­ry. Soon af­ter­wards, it was re­built in Goth­ic style or erect­ed from scratch as a Goth­ic tem­ple. On its foun­da­tion in the first half of the 18th cen­tu­ry, a new three-nave Baroque ed­i­fice rose with a wide west­ern façade, dec­o­rat­ed with two tow­ers, whose height was in­creased at the turn of the 19th and 20th cen­turies.



CHURCH OF THE ASSUMPTION OF THE HOLY MOTHER OF GOD, SOUTH ELEVATION

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he in­te­ri­or of the church con­tains as many as eleven al­tars, in­clud­ing the late Baroque main al­tar, built part­ly in mar­ble and part­ly in plas­ter stuc­co, as well as two Ro­co­co side al­tars: in the Chapel of St Au­gus­ti­ne and in the Chapel of the Vir­gin Mary. The his­toric fur­nish­ings of the tem­ple in­clude an 18th-cen­tu­ry or­gan pros­pec­tus, two bap­tismal fonts from 1714, a baroque pul­pit and canon­i­cal stalls, as well as nu­mer­ous epi­taphs and wall plaques. About a hun­dred graves of monks and lay peo­ple who died be­tween 1646 and 1794 have been pre­served in its vaults.



CHURCH OF THE ASSUMPTION OF THE HOLY MOTHER OF GOD, MAIN NAVE

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f par­tic­u­lar im­por­tance for the be­liev­ers is the mirac­u­lous and grace-fa­mous im­age of Our La­dy of Mstów, lo­cat­ed in the church, which has been treat­ed as an ob­ject of wor­ship since the sec­ond half of the 17th cen­tu­ry. It is an oil por­trait in­spired by the im­age of Our La­dy of Jas­na Gó­ra, mea­sur­ing 39 x 49 cm. The paint­ing is dec­o­rat­ed with sil­ver and gilt sheet met­al, in which or­na­ments have been en­graved. It is be­lieved that the icon was pur­chased in the first half of the 17th cen­tu­ry at one of the fairs by Ste­fan Za­moj­ski, the then own­er of the vil­lage of Strzel­ce, and be­came fa­mous af­ter he al­leged­ly cured Za­moj­ski's niece from pa­ral­y­sis. In 1647, the im­age of the Vir­gin Mary was giv­en to the canons in Mstów, and it soon be­gan to be the des­ti­na­tion of pil­grim­ages.



IMAGE OF MOTHER OF GOD OF MSTÓW IN A SILVER DRESSING

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d­join­ing the church to the north is the stone-brick con­vent build­ing with three wings ar­ranged in a bro­ken S-shape, of which the old­est one, the south­ern wing, dates from the 15th cen­tu­ry and is char­ac­terised by thick walls with small Goth­ic win­dows. It housed, among oth­ers, a cross-vault­ed chap­ter house, a li­bra­ry, as well as cham­bers for monks and mo­na­ste­ry's sub­jects. The mid­dle wing was pro­ba­bly built in the 16th cen­tu­ry, al­so in Goth­ic style. The youngest, north­ern wing of the mo­na­ste­ry dates from the 18th cen­tu­ry.



CHURCH AND RECTORY (FORMER CLOISTER)

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t the be­gin­ning of the 17th cen­tu­ry, the mo­na­ste­ry was sur­round­ed by a stone wall more than 700 me­tres in length, for­ti­fied with ten tow­ers: five of these stood in the cor­ners, two in the east­ern wall, two in the south­ern wall and one in the north­ern wall. It al­so in­clud­ed a Baroque guard­house and two gates: the two-storey main gate in the south­ern wall (now the bell tow­er) and the farm gate lead­ing in­to the mo­na­ste­ry grounds from the east. The for­ti­fied hill was ad­di­tion­al­ly pro­tect­ed by earth ram­parts with a moat, which were lev­elled at the end of the 17th cen­tu­ry.




BELL TOWER (FORMERLY THE MAIN GATE) WITH THE REMAINS OF THE GATE PASSAGEWAY


HISTORY OF THE MONASTERY

DESCRIPTION OF THE MONASTERY

SIGHTSEEING


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hat re­mains of the for­mer for­ti­fi­ca­tion is a wall (part­ly re­con­struct­ed) with nine tow­ers and the rem­nants of the north­ern tow­er, the walled-up south­ern gate serv­ing to­day as a bell tow­er, and the much-trans­formed for­mer guard­house. To­day, the mo­na­ste­ry grounds can be ac­cessed through the west gate, which was built in the 18th cen­tu­ry in the late Baroque style.




MONASTERY GATES: EASTERN (ABOVE) AND WESTERN


Free entry to the church grounds and tem­ple within open­ing hours.


Due to the sacred nature of the site, dogs and other pets are not allowed.




MONASTERY FORTIFICATIONS



GETTING THERE


M

stów is lo­cat­ed 15 km east of Czę­to­cho­wa. It can be reached from this city by bus line no. 30 or by own means of trans­port.


Free park­ing is avail­able on Tar­go­wa Street, near the gate.


Bi­cy­cles can be brought in­to the mo­na­ste­ry grounds.




BIBLIOGRAPHY


1. J. Bogdanowski: Jura warowna jaki kulturowy zasób turystyczny
2. P. Dettloff: Obraz srebrny z kościoła kanoników regularnych w Mstowie, Instytut Sztuki PAN
3. M. Kantor-Mirski: Warowny klasztor w Mstowie, Drukarnia L. Martynkowski i L. Nowak 1929
4. R. Sypek: Zamki i obiekty warowne Jury Krakowsko-Częstochowskiej




Castles nearby:
Olsztyn - ruins of a royal castle from the 14th century, 13 km
Częstochowa - fortified monastery of the Pauline Order at Jasna Góra, 14 km
Suliszowice - remains of a royal watchtower from the 14th century, 25 km
Ostrężnik - remains of a royal castle from the 14th century, 26 km
Przewodziszowice - remains of a royal watchtower from the 14th century, 32 km
Łutowiec - remains of a royal watchtower from the 14th century, 35 km
Mirów - ruins of a knight's castle from the 14th century, 35 km
Bobolice - royal castle from the 14th century (reconstruction), 37 km
Morsko - ruins of a 14th-century Bąkowiec castle, 46 km




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text: 2023
photos: 2020, 2023
© Jacek Bednarek