Trier - Konstantinbasilika
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Cathedral
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Liebfrauenkirche
Trier - Liebfrauenkirche
Trier - Liebfrauenkirche
Trier - Liebfrauenkirche
Trier - Liebfrauenkirche
Trier - Liebfrauenkirche
Trier - Liebfrauenkirche
Trier - Liebfrauenkirche
Trier - Liebfrauenkirche
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Liebfrauenkirche
Trier - Cathedral of Trier
Trier - Konstantinbasilika
Trier - St. Matthias
Trier - St. Matthias
Trier - St. Matthias
Trier - St. Matthias
Trier - St. Matthias
Trier
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Maria Laach Abbey
Bamberg - Sankt Jakob
Bamberg - Sankt Jakob
Bamberg - Alte Hofhaltung
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Trier - Konstantinbasilika


Founded by the Romans around 30 BC as "Augusta Treverorum", Trier claims, just like Xanten, Cologne, Worms, Speyer... to be the oldest existing German city.
Trier, the center of a diocese already within the 3rd century, was destroyed by the Alemanni (275), rebuilt under Constantine the Great, who resided in "Augusta Treverorum".
The Konstantinbasilika ("Basilica of Constantine", "Aula Palatina") was built by Constantine the Great around 310 and at that time was part of a larger repräsentativ palace complex.
The Aula fell into ruins, but got fortified and used as a residence for the Bishops during the Middle Ages. Within the 17th century Archbishop Lothar von Metternich had his posh (pink!) Baroque palace erected just next to the Aula and even incorporated it into this palace.
When Prussia´s political influence flooded the Rhineland, Friedrich Wilhelm IV ("Frederick William IV of Prussia") ordered the building to be restored to its original Roman state. In 1856, after the reconstruction, the structure became a Protestant church - and is that ever since under the name of "Kirche zum Erloeser".
During WWII the building burned down. It got repaired in the 1950s using modern techniques and materials.
Trier, the center of a diocese already within the 3rd century, was destroyed by the Alemanni (275), rebuilt under Constantine the Great, who resided in "Augusta Treverorum".
The Konstantinbasilika ("Basilica of Constantine", "Aula Palatina") was built by Constantine the Great around 310 and at that time was part of a larger repräsentativ palace complex.
The Aula fell into ruins, but got fortified and used as a residence for the Bishops during the Middle Ages. Within the 17th century Archbishop Lothar von Metternich had his posh (pink!) Baroque palace erected just next to the Aula and even incorporated it into this palace.
When Prussia´s political influence flooded the Rhineland, Friedrich Wilhelm IV ("Frederick William IV of Prussia") ordered the building to be restored to its original Roman state. In 1856, after the reconstruction, the structure became a Protestant church - and is that ever since under the name of "Kirche zum Erloeser".
During WWII the building burned down. It got repaired in the 1950s using modern techniques and materials.
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