Freiburg Minster
Freiburg Minster is the cathedral of Freiburg im Breisgau, southwest Germany. The last duke of Zähringen had started the building around 1200 in romanesque style. The construction continued in 1230 in Gothic style. The minster was partly built on the foundations of an original church that had been there from the beginning of Freiburg, in 1120.
In the Middle Ages, Freiburg lay in the Diocese of Konstanz. In 1827, Freiburg Minster became the seat of the newly erected Catholic Archdiocese of Freiburg, and thus a cathedral.
Architecture
The Swiss historian Jacob Burckhardt once said that the church's 116-meter tower will forever remain the most beautiful spire on earth. His remark gave rise to the frequently heard misquote of the most beautiful tower in the whole of Christianity.The tower is nearly square at the base, and at its centre is the dodecagonal star gallery. Above this gallery, the tower is octagonal and tapered, and above this, is the spire.
It is the only Gothic church tower in Germany that was completed in the Middle Ages, and miraculously, has lasted until the present, surviving the bombing raids of November 1944, which destroyed all of the houses on the west and north side of the market. The tower was subject to severe vibration at the time, and its survival of these vibrations is attributed to its lead anchors, which connect the sections of the spire. The windows had been taken out of the spire at the time by church staff led by Monsignor Max Fauler, and so these also suffered no damage.
Freiburg Minster was not the seat of a bishop until 1827, long after it was built.
The tower has 16 bells, the oldest being the "Hosanna" bell from 1258, which weighs 3,290 kilograms. This bell can be heard on Thursday evening after the Angelus, on Friday at 11:00 am, on Saturday evenings, and each year on 27 November in remembrance of the air raid.
Interior
There are two important altars inside the cathedral: the high altar of Hans Baldung, and another altar of Hans Holbein the Younger in a side chapel.The nave windows were donated by the guilds, and the symbols of the guilds are featured on them. The deep red color in some of the windows is not the result of a dye, but instead the result of a suspension of solid gold nanoparticles.
In 2003, the Lenten cloth was restored and backed with a supporting material. It now weighs over a ton, and so must be carried from the workshop with heavy machinery for its use during Lent.
Bells
The cathedral holds 19 bells, altogether 25 tonnes, making it one of the largest peals in Germany.Nr. | name | year cast | caster's name | cast at | diameter | measures | chime |
1 | Christus | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 2133 mm | 6856 kg | g0 |
2 | Petrus | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 1774 mm | 3917 kg | bes0 |
3 | Paulus | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 1566 mm | 2644 kg | c1 |
4 | Maria | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 1490 mm | 2290 kg | d1 |
5 | Hosanna | 1258 | anonymous | 1610 mm | 3290 kg | es1 | |
6 | Josef | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 1242 mm | 1354 kg | f1 |
7 | Nikolaus | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 1095 mm | 958 kg | g1 |
8 | Johannes | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 1081 mm | 913 kg | a1 |
9 | Jakobus | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 1022 mm | 803 kg | bes1 |
10 | Konrad | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 903 mm | 560 kg | c2 |
11 | Bernhard | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 798 mm | 381 kg | d2 |
12 | Lambert und Alexander | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 670 mm | 212 kg | f2 |
13 | Michael | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 594 mm | 149 kg | g2 |
14 | Schutzengel | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 575 mm | 150 kg | a2 |
15 | Odilia | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 505 mm | 112 kg | c3 |
16 | Magnificat | 1959 | Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling | Heidelberg | 456 mm | 79 kg | d3 |
17 | Vesperglöckchen | 1606 | Hans Ulrich Bintzlin | Breisach | 510 mm | 70 kg | b2 |
18 | Silberglöckchen | 13th century | anonymous | 352 mm | 33 kg | f3 | |
19 | Taufglocke | 13th/14th century | anonymous | 550 mm | 95 kg | a2 |
Burials
- Berthold V, Duke of Zähringen
- The Locherer family
Legal situation