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Reichenau

REICHENAU, a picturesque island in the Untersee or western arm of the lake of Constance, 3 m. long by i broad, and connected with the east shore by a causeway three-quarters of a mile long. It belongs to the grand duchy of Baden. The soil 1 The once popular view that " king of Judah " stands in no. 29 is untenable. See Petrie, Hist, of Egypt, ii. p. 235; L. B. Paton, Syria and Pal. p. 193 sq.; W. M. Miiller, Mitteil. Vorderasiat. Gesell., 1900, p. 19 sq., and Ency. Bib. col. 4486. Breasted (Amer. Journ. of Sent. Lang., 1904, p. 36) has made the interesting observation that the list mentions " the field of Abram " (nos. 71 and 72) ; see further, id., Egypt Hist. Records, iv. pp. 348-357.

is very fertile, and excellent wine is produced in sufficient quantity for exportation. The Benedictine abbey of Reichenau, founded in 724, was long celebrated for its wealth and for the services rendered by its monks to the cause of learning. In 1540 the abbey, which had previously been independent, was annexed to the see of Constance, and in 1799 it was secularized. The abbey church, dating in part from the pth century, contains the tomb of Charles the Fat (d. 888), who retired to this island in 887, after losing the empire of Charlemagne. It now serves as the parish church of Mittelzell, while the churches of Oberzell and Unterzell are also interesting buildings of the Carolingian era.

Note - this article incorporates content from Encyclopaedia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, (1910-1911)

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