Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Abbey and Altenmünster of Lorsch' has mentioned 'Mainz' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Imperial Abbey of LorschReichsabtei Lorsch852xe2x80x931232 Coat of arms StatusImperial AbbeyCapitalLorsch AbbeyGovernmentTheocracyHistorical eraMiddle Agesxe2x80xa2xc2xa0Founded by Count Cancor 764xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Codex Aureus produced 778xe2x80x93820 852xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Immediacy confirmed 852xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Gorze Reforms 10th centuryxe2x80xa2xc2xa0Lorsch codex produced 1175xe2x80x9395xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Granted to Mainz byxc2xa0xc2xa0xc2xa0xc2xa0Pope Gregory IX andxc2xa0xc2xa0xc2xa0xc2xa0Emp.
The abbey and basilica were then renamed in honour of Saint Nazarius: the main church of Saints Peter, Paul, and Nazarius was consecrated by the Archbishop of Mainz in September 774, in the presence of Charlemagne.
After 46 Benedictine abbots had governed the abbey, Conrad, the last of them, was deposed by Pope Gregory IX in 1226, and through the influence of Friedrich II (Frederick II), Lorsch came into the possession of Siegfried III, Archbishop of Mainz, in 1232, ending the period of Lorsch's cultural and political independence.
After Lorsch had been incorporated in the Electorate of Mainz (1232), it lost a large part of its privileges.
The glorious Carolingian establishment slowly deteriorated under the impact of the vagaries of politics and war: Lorsch was attached to the Palatinate in 1461, returned to Mainz in 1623, and incorporated in the Electorate of Hesse in 1803.