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Konrad Von Marburg

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Konrad Von Marburg

Birth
Marburg, Landkreis Marburg-Biedenkopf, Hessen, Germany
Death
30 Jul 1233 (aged 37–38)
Beltershausen, Landkreis Marburg-Biedenkopf, Hessen, Germany
Burial
Marburg, Landkreis Marburg-Biedenkopf, Hessen, Germany Add to Map
Plot
Hof Capelle - Beltershausen
Memorial ID
View Source
Konrad von Marburg (sometimes anglicised as Conrad of Marburg; (Born 1195-died 30 July 1233) was a medieval, German priest and nobleman. He was commissioned by the pope to combat the Albigensians. The place where Konrad was killed, Hof Kapelle near Marburg, is marked with a stone (within the premises of a private farm); it was locally long believed to be haunted and is allegedly today on certain days the site of black rites. A fountain on the lower Steinweg, one of Marburg's main lanes, close to St. Elisabeth Church, which in some neo-gothic restoration attempt was topped with the effigy of a generic monk that was locally believed to represent Konrad, was continuously stoned by the students of the University of Marburg, and after many attempts at replacement, had to be substituted with an architectural ornament.Konrad appears in a work by the English novelist Charles Kingsley, who wrote his Saint's Tragedy about Elisabeth.



Konrad von Marburg (sometimes anglicised as Conrad of Marburg; (Born 1195-died 30 July 1233) was a medieval, German priest and nobleman. He was commissioned by the pope to combat the Albigensians. The place where Konrad was killed, Hof Kapelle near Marburg, is marked with a stone (within the premises of a private farm); it was locally long believed to be haunted and is allegedly today on certain days the site of black rites. A fountain on the lower Steinweg, one of Marburg's main lanes, close to St. Elisabeth Church, which in some neo-gothic restoration attempt was topped with the effigy of a generic monk that was locally believed to represent Konrad, was continuously stoned by the students of the University of Marburg, and after many attempts at replacement, had to be substituted with an architectural ornament.Konrad appears in a work by the English novelist Charles Kingsley, who wrote his Saint's Tragedy about Elisabeth.




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