The monastery of St. Mary and St. Theodore on Kaulberg was an abbey of Cistercian nuns to 1553;…read morefrom 1589 to 1802 it was and is again from 1902 the Carmelite monastery.
According to tradition, Bamberg's first bishop Eberhard I is said to have founded a hospital for the sick and poor on the hill opposite the Bamberg Cathedral in 1030 and consecrated it to St. Theodore. In 1157, Bishop Eberhard II of Bamberg, with the help of Countess Palatine Gertrud, a sister of King Konrad III., to build the women's monastery of St. Maria and St. Theodor. When the monastery was founded, Bishop Eberhard II was primarily motivated by the intention that "our city, which is surrounded on all sides by bulwarks of canons and monks, also has consecrated virgins in its vicinity, the service of God in it and the caring for the poor and strangers leave nothing to be desired."
The women's monastery was looted in the Peasants' War in 1525 and dissolved after the Second Margrave War in 1554. In 1589 the Carmelites, who had previously lived in the monastery in the Au, moved in. The convent was famous for its library, for which a separate library building became necessary in 1593 and was redesigned in 1675. Between 1692 and 1702 Leonhard Dientzenhofer redesigned the monastery church in Baroque style. The west wing was rebuilt from 1737 and the convent buildings were rebuilt. In 1797 the spiers were renewed. The ceiling painting in Johann Anwander's library was created around 1755.
The Carmelite monastery was dissolved in 1803 in the course of secularization. The Bavarian military administration had all the pillars of the west wing torn out and replaced by a wall with windows. The real estates were auctioned and furnishings from the church were sold to other churches. The buildings were used, among other things, as a hospital, schoolhouse and barracks. In 1902, shod Carmelites from Straubing acquired the monastery complex. From September 1, 1918 to 1989, the Carmelites supervised the Marianum boys' seminary. Since 1946, the Carmelites have supported the Theresianum (Bamberg) late professions with a humanistic grammar school, college and seminary.
My photos won't do any justice about the beauty of this sanctuary inside. It is simply magnificent with beautiful furnishings, altars, shrines, etc. There's a very nice book/gift shop adjacent to the church. It is a must visit while you are in Bamberg. You will not regret it for sure.