Fritzlar - St. Peter
Fritzlar - St. Peter
Fritzlar - St. Peter
Fritzlar - St. Peter
Fritzlar - St. Peter
Fritzlar
Lorsch - Abbey
Buehl - Maria Hilf
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Maulbronn - Monastery
Lippstadt - Marienkirche
Wormbach - St. Peter und Paul
Meschede - Koenigsmuenster
Meschede - St. Walburga
Meschede - St. Walburga
Meschede - St. Walburga
Meschede - St. Walburga
Hellefeld - St. Martinus
Hellefeld - St. Martinus
Stockum - St. Pankratius
Plettenberg - Christuskirche
Plettenberg - Christuskirche
Balve - St. Blasius
Saint-Félix Lauragais
Sorèze - Saint-Martin
Sorèze - Saint-Martin
Sorèze - Saint-Martin
Cahuzac - Tartissou
En Calcat - Abbaye Sainte Scholastique
En Calcat - Abbaye Saint Benoît
La Lugarie - Saint-Jean
La Lugarie - Saint-Jean
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Fritzlar - St. Peter


This was not the best time to visit Fritzlar. Most of St. Peter was hidden behind screens, due to a longterm renovation - cloister, museum and treasury were temporarly closed. As it was early morning, the light was not good for taking photos from this side, but I did not want to wait.
This church is tightly connected to Saint Bonifatius (aka "Wynfnith", "Winfrid") the most important christian missionary in the east of the Frankish Kingdom, preaching the gospel to the germanic tribes.
The "Vita sancti Bonifati", written only some decades after his martyrdom in 755, tells, that Saint Bonitatius came to this place and chopped down a sacred oak, dedicated to the pagan god Thor (Donar). All onlookers were waiting for Thor´s fierce reaction, but Thor did not care. After the felling Saint Bonifatius used the timber - and had a wooden church built here. There is a statue in front of the church, that shows Bonifatius standing on the stub of a oak, holding a huge axe. He founded a monastery nearby and named Saint Wigbert the first abbot. Saint Wigbert replaced the humble wooden structure by a prestigious stone one. This was probably the church that archeologists found traces of. It dates back to the end of the 8th century. Times were hard, in 774 pagan Saxons destroyed the abbey, but the stone church (23 meters.long), obviously withstook the attacs.
But the Saxons returned in 1079 - and this time, they looted and destroyed the abbey, the church and the settlement. The building of a three nave, flat roofed basilica started 1085/1090 and was completed in 1118. It was an impressing large church with an extensive westwork, but already in 1171 the visiting Archbishop found the structure in such a bad state, the he commisioned a "rebuilding", what, as the romanesque style had changed created a "new church".
Nowadays many architectural styles can be found here, as architects and builders were busy all the time. The church was part of a convent upto the secularisation. Since 1803 this is a parish church. In the 19th century the state of the building worsened and got unstable. During a mass in December 1868 a gusting wind destroyed the spire of the southern tower. The debris broke through roof and vaultings. A catastrophy with a death toll of 21.
The reconstruction done in 1873, created the new look with two high towers. Note the large narthex.
Here is a "timtable" created by the parish (in German):
www.katholische-kirche-fritzlar.de/fritzlar/dom/zeittafel...
This church is tightly connected to Saint Bonifatius (aka "Wynfnith", "Winfrid") the most important christian missionary in the east of the Frankish Kingdom, preaching the gospel to the germanic tribes.
The "Vita sancti Bonifati", written only some decades after his martyrdom in 755, tells, that Saint Bonitatius came to this place and chopped down a sacred oak, dedicated to the pagan god Thor (Donar). All onlookers were waiting for Thor´s fierce reaction, but Thor did not care. After the felling Saint Bonifatius used the timber - and had a wooden church built here. There is a statue in front of the church, that shows Bonifatius standing on the stub of a oak, holding a huge axe. He founded a monastery nearby and named Saint Wigbert the first abbot. Saint Wigbert replaced the humble wooden structure by a prestigious stone one. This was probably the church that archeologists found traces of. It dates back to the end of the 8th century. Times were hard, in 774 pagan Saxons destroyed the abbey, but the stone church (23 meters.long), obviously withstook the attacs.
But the Saxons returned in 1079 - and this time, they looted and destroyed the abbey, the church and the settlement. The building of a three nave, flat roofed basilica started 1085/1090 and was completed in 1118. It was an impressing large church with an extensive westwork, but already in 1171 the visiting Archbishop found the structure in such a bad state, the he commisioned a "rebuilding", what, as the romanesque style had changed created a "new church".
Nowadays many architectural styles can be found here, as architects and builders were busy all the time. The church was part of a convent upto the secularisation. Since 1803 this is a parish church. In the 19th century the state of the building worsened and got unstable. During a mass in December 1868 a gusting wind destroyed the spire of the southern tower. The debris broke through roof and vaultings. A catastrophy with a death toll of 21.
The reconstruction done in 1873, created the new look with two high towers. Note the large narthex.
Here is a "timtable" created by the parish (in German):
www.katholische-kirche-fritzlar.de/fritzlar/dom/zeittafel...
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