The former Jesuit Church (Jesuitenkirche) and today the Protestant Town Church (Stadtkirche) connects to St. Vitus at a right angle. It was erected between 1724 and 1729 after monastery buildings east of the seminary had been torn down. Half of its front façade lies behind the west tower of the basilica. The two churches are connected by the western part of the cloister. The door between the churches remained closed off for over 200 years until the Secularization of 1802/1803.
The interior of the Jesuit Church holds a masterpiece of Baroque illusionary painting by Christoph Thomas Scheffler, a student of Cosmas Damian Asam, who made a name for himself with the depicted scenes from the life of Maria. The seven altars by Melchior Paulus, which were provided with paintings by Thomas Scheffler, were removed in 1803 during its conversion to a Protestant court church. The Monastery Hospital (Klosterspital) Pilgrimage and parish church of St. Mary (Unsere Liebe Frau) on Schönenberg mountain