
Basler Munster - Basel, Switzerland
Posted by:
manchanegra
N 47° 33.370 E 007° 35.510
32T E 394060 N 5267932
Quick Description: The Basel (Basler) Münster (Basel Cathedral) is one of the main landmarks and tourist attractions of the Swiss city of Basel and is listed as a heritage site of national significance.
Location: Nordwestschweiz (AG/BL/BS), Switzerland
Date Posted: 5/1/2009 4:44:14 AM
Waymark Code: WM6A7K
Views: 11
Long Description:?The Basel Münster (Basler Münster) is one of the main landmarks
and tourist attractions of the Swiss city of Basel and is listed as
a heritage site of national significance.
Originally a Catholic cathedral and today a reformed Protestant
church, it was built between 1019 and 1500 in Romanesque and Gothic
styles. The late Romanesque building was destroyed by the 1356
Basel earthquake and rebuilt by Johannes Gmünd, who was at the same
time employed for building the Freiburg Münster. This building was
extended from 1421 by Ulrich von Ensingen, architect of the
cathedral towers at Ulm and Strasbourg. The southern tower was
completed in 1500 by Hans von Nußdorf.
Building history
Early structures
The hill on which the Münster is located today was already a
building site in the late Celtic Era in first century BC. A
pre-Roman rampart (Murus Gallicus) was uncovered during
archeological excavations. Both gate constructions and the
historical run of the street can be partly retraced. This road
parted at today's position of the Münster where once assumedly was
a small temple which later was replaced by a Roman fort.
The first bishop of Basel is claimed to be Justinianus 343-346
AC. The bishop's see was relocated from Kaiseraugst (Augusta
Raurica) to Münster hill during the Early Middle Ages. According to
the archeologist Hans Rudolf Sennhauser this transfer presumably
took place at the beginning of the seventh Century under bishop
Ragnacharius, a former monk of monastery Luxeuil. There is no
historical evidence for (the existence) of a cathedral before the
ninth century.
Second church structure - the Heinrich Münster
Built on the old foundations of the Haito Münster some time after
the turn of the first millennium a new building in the early
Romanesque style of the Ottonian period was built by order of
Bishop Adalberto II (approx. 999 - 1025). Sometimes called
“Adalberto Cathedral”, the three-nave cathedral is actually named
after its patron Emperor Henry II, in German “Heinrich”. The
cathedral is dedicated to Emperor Henry II and his wife Kunigunde.
The bishop governed the city as representative of the Emperor who
gained possession of Basel in 1006.
Excavations from 1973-1974 prove that the crypt of this
building, consecrated in 1019, had not been expanded. At the end of
the eleventh century a tower made of light-colored limestone and
molasse was erected on the western side of the building. This
historic structure remains forming the bottom part of the north
tower (Georgsturm) today. Heinrich Münster did not possess a tower
on the south side.
Third church structure - late Romanesque
The building as it stands today dates back for the most part to the
late Romanesque building constructed in the last third of the 12th
century and completed around 1225. On the foundations of the
previous buildings a church with three naves and a transept was
built. Even though supported by massive pillars, an earthquake in
1356 destroyed five towers, various vaults and parts of the crypts.
Johannes von Gmünd, who was also the architect of Freiburg Minster,
rebuilt the damaged cathedral and in 1363 the main altar was
consecrated. In 1421 Ulrich von Ensingen, who constructed the
towers of the minsters in Ulm and Strasbourg, began the extension
of the northern tower (Georgsturm). This phase ended in 1429. The
southern tower (Martinsturm) was completed by Hans von Nussdorf on
23 July 1500. This date marks the official architectural completion
of the minster. In the 15th century the major and the minor
cloisters were added. The minster served as a bishop’s see until
1529 during the Reformation. In the 19th century two major
restorations took place. From 1852 until 1857 the rood screen was
moved and the crypt on the western side was closed. In the 20th
century the main aim of renovations has been to emphasize the late
Romanesque architecture and to reverse some modifications made in
the 1850s. Additionally, the floor was returned to its original
level in 1975 and the crypt reopened. A workshop dedicated to
taking care of the increasingly deteriorating sandstone exterior
was set up in 1985.
Text from wikipedia
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