Cologne - St. Kunibert
Cologne - St. Kunibert
Cologne - St. Kunibert
Cologne - St. Kunibert
Cologne - St. Kunibert
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Cologne - St. Kunibert
Cologne - St. Kunibert
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Cologne - St. Kunibert
Cologne is the fourth-largest city in Germany - and one of the oldest. A Germanic tribe, the Ubii, had a settlement here, this was named by the Romans "Oppidum Ubiorum". In 50 AD, the Romans founded "Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium", the city then became the provincial capital of "Germania Inferior".
The legend tells, that Saint Kunibert, who was bishop of Cologne and advisor to King Dagobert I, founded a monastery here. In its center existed a church, dedicated to Saint Clemens, where St. Kunibert was buried.
Around 1210 the construction of a new church began. The choir was completed in 1226. St. Kunibert was consecrated in 1247, just a year before he Gothic cathedral was begun. So this is the "youngest" of the Romanesque churches in Cologne.
As a result of the secalurization the monastery ceased to exist in 1802. The church remained in use by the local parish.
In 1830 the the western tower collapsed during a storm. It got rebuilt until 1860 but got ruined in 1944, when the church fell into ruins due to the air raids. Reconstruction of choir and nave were finished 1955, however rebuilding of transept and western tower were only started in the late 1970s, after a long controversial dispute. Reconstruction work was finally finished in 1993.
Some windows of the choir date back to 1220/1230. The altar is from 1226. Golden reliquaries flank the altar, as not only Saint Kunibert was buried and worshipped here. This was as well the burial place of the Black and the Fair Ewald ( aka "Two Ewalds", "Brüder Ewaldi"), two missionaries from Northumbira. They tried to baptize the pagain Saxons, but got martyred in Westphalia.
The legend tells, that Saint Kunibert, who was bishop of Cologne and advisor to King Dagobert I, founded a monastery here. In its center existed a church, dedicated to Saint Clemens, where St. Kunibert was buried.
Around 1210 the construction of a new church began. The choir was completed in 1226. St. Kunibert was consecrated in 1247, just a year before he Gothic cathedral was begun. So this is the "youngest" of the Romanesque churches in Cologne.
As a result of the secalurization the monastery ceased to exist in 1802. The church remained in use by the local parish.
In 1830 the the western tower collapsed during a storm. It got rebuilt until 1860 but got ruined in 1944, when the church fell into ruins due to the air raids. Reconstruction of choir and nave were finished 1955, however rebuilding of transept and western tower were only started in the late 1970s, after a long controversial dispute. Reconstruction work was finally finished in 1993.
Some windows of the choir date back to 1220/1230. The altar is from 1226. Golden reliquaries flank the altar, as not only Saint Kunibert was buried and worshipped here. This was as well the burial place of the Black and the Fair Ewald ( aka "Two Ewalds", "Brüder Ewaldi"), two missionaries from Northumbira. They tried to baptize the pagain Saxons, but got martyred in Westphalia.
Marco F. Delminho has particularly liked this photo
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