Everything about The Cologne Cathedral totally explained
The
Cologne Cathedral (officially ) is the seat of the
Archbishop of Cologne, under the administration of the
Roman Catholic Church and is renowned as a monument of
Christianity, of
Gothic architecture and of the faith and perseverance of the people of the city in which it stands. It is dedicated to
Saint Peter and the
Blessed Virgin Mary.
The cathedral is a
World Heritage Site, being one of the best-known architectural monuments in
Germany, and
Cologne's most famous landmark, described by UNESCO as an "exceptional work of human creative genius". Cologne Cathedral is one of the world's largest churches, being the largest Gothic church in Northern Europe. For four years, 1880-84, it was the tallest structure in the world, until the completion of the
Washington Monument followed by the
Eiffel Tower. It has the second-tallest church spires, only surpassed by the single
spire of
Ulm Cathedral, completed ten years later in
1890. Because of its enormous twin spires, it also presents the largest façade of any church in the world.
The
choir of Cologne Cathedral, measured between the piers, also holds the distinction of having the largest height to width ratio of any Medieval church, 3.6:1, exceeding even
Beauvais Cathedral which has a slightly higher vault.
Construction of the
Gothic church began in
1248 and took, with interruptions, until
1880 to complete a period of over six hundred years. It is 144.5
metres long, 86.5 m wide and its two towers are 157 m tall.
Cologne Cathedral, despite having been left incomplete during the medieval period, eventually became unified as
"a masterpiece of exceptional intrinsic value" and
"a powerful testimony to the strength and persistence of Christian belief in medieval and modern Europe",
Some work proceeded intermittently on the structure of the nave between the west front and the eastern arm but during the 16th century, this ceased.
19th century completion
With the nineteenth century
romantic enthusiasm for the
Middle Ages and spurred on by the lucky discovery of the original plan for the facade, it was decided, with the commitment of the
Prussian Court, to complete the cathedral. It was achieved by civic effort, the
Central-Dombauverein, founded in 1842, raised two thirds of the enormous costs (over US$ 1 billion in today's money), while the Prussian state supplied the remaining third.
Work resumed in 1842 to the original design of the surviving medieval plans and drawings, but utilising more modern construction techniques including iron roof girders. The nave was completed and the towers were added.
The completion of Germany's largest cathedral was celebrated as a national event in 1880, 632 years after construction had begun. The celebration was attended by Emperor
Wilhelm I.
World War II and post-war history
The cathedral suffered fourteen hits by
aerial bombs during
World War II. It didn't at all collapse, but stood tall in an otherwise flattened city. Believers said it was divine intervention. The truth is however more prosaic. In a world without GPS, the tall building was perfect for allied aircraft to use as a landmark from which to calculate bearings to other bomb targets in Germany and southern Europe, and thus was left intact for pilots of future missions use as reference points.
The repairs to the building were completed in 1956. In the northwest tower's base, an emergency repair carried out with bad-quality brick taken from a nearby war ruin (see German Wikipedia "Kölner Domplombe") remained visible until the late 1990s as a reminder of the War, but then it was decided to reconstruct this section according to the original appearance.
Some repair and maintenance work is almost constantly being carried out in some section of the building, which is almost never completely free of scaffolding, since wind, rain, and pollution slowly eat away at the stones. The
Dombauhütte, which was established to build the cathedral and repair the cathedral, is said to employ the best stonemasons of the Rhineland. There is a common joke in Cologne that the leader of the
Dombauhütte, the
Dombaumeister (master builder of the cathedral), has to be
Catholic and free from giddiness. The current Dombaumeisterin is Barbara Schock-Werner. Half of the costs of repair and maintenance are still borne by the
Dombauverein.
On
August 25 2007, the cathedral received a new
stained glass in the south
transept window. With 113 square metres of glass, the window was created by the German artist
Gerhard Richter. It is composed of 11,500 identically sized pieces of coloured glass resembling
pixels, randomly arranged by computer, which create a colorful "carpet". Since the loss of the original window in World War II, the space had been temporarily filled with plain glass.
Joachim Cardinal Meissner, who had preferred a figurative depiction of 20th-century Catholic martyrs for the window, didn't attend the unveiling.
World Heritage Site
In 1996, the cathedral was added to the
UNESCO World Heritage List of culturally important sites. In 2004 it was placed on the "World Heritage in Danger" list due to nearby high-rise building and its visual impact upon the site, as the only Western site in danger. The cathedral was removed from the List of In Danger Sites in 2006, following the authorities' decision to limit the heights of buildings constructed near and around the cathedral.
As a World Heritage Site, and with its convenient position on tourist routes, Cologne Cathedral is a major tourist attraction, the visitors including many who travel there as a Christian pilgrimage.
The cathedral is open every day from 6.00am to 7.30pm; admission is free except for tower ascent and the treasury. Visitors can climb 509 steps of the spiral staircase to a viewing platform about 98 metres above the ground.
On
May 12 2001, the American rock band
R.E.M. performed a free concert in Roncalliplatz, the square to the south side of Cologne Cathedral. The concert was organised to promote the eradication of violence in schools, and was in part broadcast live on MTV Europe.
On
August 18 2005,
Pope Benedict XVI visited the cathedral as part of his apostolic visit to Germany as part of
World Youth Day 2005 festivities. An estimated 1 million pilgrims visited the cathedral during this time. Also as part of the events of World Youth Day, Cologne Cathedral hosted a televised gala performance of
Beethoven's
Missa Solemnis, performed by the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and the London Philharmonic Choir conducted by Sir
Gilbert Levine.
Architecture
The design of Cologne Cathedral was based quite closely on that of
Amiens Cathedral in terms of groundplan, style and the width to height proportion of the central nave. The plan is in the shape of a
Latin Cross, as is usual with Gothic cathedrals. It has two aisles on either side, which help to support one of the very highest Gothic vaults in the world, being nearly as tall as that of the ill-fated
Beauvais Cathedral, much of which collapsed. Externally the outward thrust of the vault is taken up by flying buttresses in the French manner. The eastern end has a single ambulatory, the second aisle resolving into a
chevette of seven radiating chapels.
Internally, the Medieval quire is more varied and less mechanical in its details than the 19th century building. It presents a French style arrangement of very tall arcade, a delicate narrow triforium gallery lit by windows and with detailed tracery merging with that of the windows above. The clerestory windows are tall and retain some old figurative glass in the lower sections. The whole is united by the tall shafts which sweep unbroken from floor to their capitals at the spring of the vault. The vault is of plain quadripartite arrangement.
The quire retains a great many of its original fittings, including the carved stalls, which is made the more surprising by the fact that Napoleon's troops had desecrated the building. A large stone statue of
St Christopher looks down towards the place where the earlier entrance to the cathedral was, before its completion in the late 19th century.
The nave is enhanced by a good many 19th century stained-glass windows including a set of five on the south side called the "Bayernfenster" which were a gift from
Ludwig I of Bavaria, a set highly representative of the painterly German style of that date.
Externally, particularly from a distance, the building is dominated by its huge spires which are entirely Germanic in character, being openwork like those of
Ulm,
Vienna and
Regensburg Cathedrals.
Treasures of Cologne Cathedral
The most celebrated work of art in the cathedral is the
Shrine of the Three Kings, a large gilded
sarcophagus dating from the 13th century, and the largest
reliquary in the Western world. It is traditionally believed to hold the remains of the
Three Wise Men, whose bones and 2,000-year-old clothes were discovered at the opening of the shrine in 1864.
Near the
sacristy is the
Gero-Kreuz,
(External Link
) a large crucifix carved in oak and with traces of paint and gilding. Believed to have been commissioned around 960 for Archbishop Gero, it's the oldest large crucifix north of the
Alps and the earliest-known large free-standing Northern sculpture of the medieval period.
In the Sacrament Chapel, is the
Mailänder Madonna ("Milan Madonna"), dating from around 1290, a wooden sculpture depicting the
Blessed Virgin Mary and the infant
Jesus. The altar of the patron saints of Cologne with an altar piece by the
International Gothic painter,
Stephan Lochner is in the
Marienkapelle ("St. Mary's Chapel"). Other outstanding works of art are to be found in the Cathedral Treasury.
Bells
The cathedral has twelve church bells, of which four are Medieval. The first was the 3.8-
ton Dreikönigenglocke ("Bell of the Three Kings"), cast in 1418, installed in 1437, and recast in 1880. Two of the other bells, the
Pretiosa (10,5 tons; at that time the largest bell in the
Occident) and the
Speciosa (5,6 tons) were installed in 1448 and remain in place today. The largest bell, the 24-ton
St. Petersglocke ("Bell of St. Peter", "Dicke Pitter" in the
Kölsch dialect), was cast in 1922 and is the largest free-swinging bell in the world. (See below:
Gallery, Petersglocke)
- Consecration Bell - 0.425 tonnes
- Vespers Bell - 0.28 tonnes
- Angelus Bell - 0.763 tonnes
- Hail Bell - 0.83 tonnes
- Chapter Bell - 1.4 tonnes
- St Joseph's Bell - 2.2 tonnes
- Ursula Bell - 2.55 tonnes
- Bell of the Magi - 3.8 tonnes
- Pretiosia - 5.6 tonnes
- Speciosia - 10.5 tonnes
- Petersglocke - 24 tonnes
Church music
Organists
Josef Zimmermann
Clemens Ganz (1985–2001)
Winfried Bönig (2001)
Dimensions
| External length |
144.58 m |
External width |
86.25 m |
Width of west façade |
61.54 m |
Width of transept façade |
39.95 m |
Width of nave (interior) |
45.19 m |
Height of southern tower |
157.31 m |
Height of northern tower |
157.38 m |
Height of ridge turret |
109.00 m |
Height of transept façades |
69.95 m |
Height of roof ridge |
61.10 m |
Inner height of nave |
43.35 m |
Building area |
7,914 m² |
Window surface area |
10,000 m² |
Roof surface area |
12,000 m² |
Interior volume |
407,000 m³ |
Gallery
Image:Koeln RdFlug 2.JPG|A "Bird's eye view" of the Dom from the east shows the cruciform plan, the proportion of the spires to the building and the radiating buttresses of the east end.
Image:Cologne Cathedral 001.jpg|The north transept seen from Kölner Hauptbahnhof reveals the taller central space framed by lower aisles, spanned by flying buttresses.
Image:Cathedral main entrance.jpg|The main entrance shows the brittle repetitive nature of the 19th century decoration.
Image:Cathedral 1 by andy205.jpg|The earlier carving around this entrance is lively.
image:Koelner-dom-spire.jpg|The exterior of one of the Cathedral's spires
image:CologneCathedralInSpire.JPG|Inside a spire showing the openwork construction.
Image:Koelner dom blick nach osten.jpg|The flying buttresses and pinnacles of the East end.
Image:Koelner Dom Dach.jpg|Inside the roofspace steel girders rise above the stone vaulting.
Image:Cologne Cathedral St Christopher.jpg|This medieval statue of St. Christopher, Patron of Travellers, welcomes visitors to the Cathedral.
Image:Cathedral 2 by andy205.jpg|The five windows on the South side were given by Ludwig I of Bavaria.
Image:Bayerfenster Ss Peter and Virgin Mary.jpg|Detail of a window showing the patrons of the Cathedral, St. Peter and the Virgin Mary.
Image:Koelnerdomlightshow.jpg|A lightshow in the Cathedral. photo F.Feldhoffer.
Image:CologneCathedralBell02.jpg|Petersglocke Note person to right of bell clapper.
Image:Koelner Dom bei Nacht 1 RB.JPG|Cologne Cathedral floodlit.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Cologne Cathedral'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://cologne_cathedral.totallyexplained.com">Cologne Cathedral Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |