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Essential
Architecture- Hanseatic city of Lübeck
Lübeck Cathedral - Lübecker Dom |
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architect
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location
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Lübeck |
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date
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1173 (bombed 1942, partially rebuilt) |
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style
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Hanseatic
Brick Gothic |
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construction
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Brick |
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type
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Church |
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c. 1900 |
The Lübeck Cathedral (German: Dom zu Lübeck, or colloquially Lübecker Dom)
is a large brick Lutheran cathedral in Lübeck, Germany and part of
Lübeck's world heritage. It was started in 1173 by Henry the Lion as a
cathedral for the Bishop of Lübeck. It was partly destroyed in a bombing
raid in World War II (1942), and later reconstructed. The organ by Arp
Schnitger was lost in the fire. The current church was finished in 1982.
It is also famous for works of Bernt Notke and Thomas Quellinus,
which survived the bombing raid in 1942. The famous altar by Hans
Memling is now in Lübeck's St. Annen Museum.
Construction
In 1173 Henry the Lion founded the cathedral to serve
the diocese of Lübeck, after the transfer in 1160 of the bishop's seat
from Oldenburg in Holstein under bishop Gerold.
The then Romanesque cathedral was completed around 1230, but
between 1266 and 1335 it was converted into a Gothic-style building with
side-aisles raised to the same height as the main aisle (around 20m).
On the night of Palm Sunday (28-29 March) 1942 a bombing raid
destroyed a fifth of the town centre. Several bombs fell in the area
around the church, causing the eastern vault of the quire to collapse
and destroying the altar which dated from 1696. A fire from the
neighbouring cathedral museum spread to the truss of the cathedral, and
around noon on Palm Sunday the towers collapsed. An Arp Schnitger organ
was lost in the flames. Nevertheless, a relatively large portion of the
internal fittings was saved, including the cross and almost all of the
medieval polyptychs. In 1946 a further collapse, of the gable of the
north transept, destroyed the vestibule almost completely.
Reconstruction
Reconstruction of the cathedral took several decades, as
greater priority was given to the rebuilding of the Marienkirche. Work
was completed only in 1982.
In 2002 a symposium took place in conjunction with the Lübeck
Academy of Music to consider the reconstruction of the Arp Schnitger
organ. It was concluded that such a reconstruction would be possible,
but no decision has yet been taken. The discussion follows a research
project at the university in Göteborg, Sweden where a reconstruction of
the Lübeck organ has been going on since the mid-1990s. That
reconstruction was concluded in 2001 with installation of the replica,
including a replica of the organ front, in an earlier abandoned church
from the late 1890s, Örgryte church. The church is now rebuilt as a
concert hall.
The cathedral is unique in that at 105 m, it is shorter than the
tallest church in the city. This is the consequence of a power struggle
between the church and the guilds.
Fixtures
The 17 m crucifix is the work of the Lübeck artist Bernt
Notke. It was commissioned by the bishop of Lübeck, Albert II.
Krummendiek, and erected in 1477. The carvings which decorate the rood
screen are also by Notke.
Since the war, the famous altar of Hans Memling has been in the
medieval collection of the St. Annen Museum, but notable polyptychs
remain in the cathedral.
In the funeral chapels of the southern aisle are Baroque-era
memorials by the Flemish sculptor Thomas Quellinus.
Legend
According to legend, in the 8th century Charlemagne was
hunting in Saxony and chased a huge deer. After a long pursuit he
succeeded in capturing the animal but neither killed nor kept it.
Instead he took a gold chain and laid it on the deer's antlers.
Four hundred years later the Wends and Saxons had converted to
Christianity, and the man now out hunting was Henry the Lion, the
founder of Lübeck. Henry had separated himself from his followers in
order to be alone with his thoughts. He wanted to build a church, but
lacked the necessary funds. At that moment a great deer appeared before
him with a diamond-encrusted crucifix in its antlers. He took this as a
sign from God, and shot the animal. He took the cross from its antlers;
hardly had he done so when the deer rose up and disappeared into the
bushes. The young duke now had enough money for the construction of the
church.
Cathedral and congregation today
The cathedral is now one of the three episcopal churches
of the North Elbian Evangelical Church. Since 2001 the bishop has been
Bärbel Wartenberg-Potter.
The congregation is closely connected with the musical life of
the city. Thanks to the long-serving organist and cantor Uwe Röhl
(1925-2005), the cathedral plays host to the Schleswig-Holstein Musik
Festival.
References
Paul Brockhaus (Hrsg.): Vom Lübecker Dom, Lübeck 1958
Wolfgang Grusnick / Friedrich Zimmermann: Der Dom zu Lübeck,
Verlag Langewiesche, Königstein a.T., 1996 ISBN 3-7845-0827-8
Matthias Riemer: Domus Dei - Bei Gott zu Hause. Raumkonzepte im
Lübecker Dom - eine Annäherung. In: Das Gedächtnis der Hansestadt Lübeck:
Festschrift für Antjekathrin Graßmann zum 65. Geburtstag. In Verbindung
mit dem Verein für Lübeckische Geschichte und Altertumskunde und dem
Hansischen Geschichtsverein hrsg. von Rolf Hammel-Kiesow und Michael
Hundt. Lübeck : Schmidt-Römhild, 2005. ISBN 3-7950-5555-5
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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