Jon Searles' photos with the keyword: Stephensdom

(St. Stephen's Cathedral) Wien, Picture 21, Edited…

03 Nov 2013 129
Here's a shot of the later, gothic spire, also called the Steffle. It was added over 65 years between 1368 and 1433. It doesn't look it (maybe because it's also thicker than many steeples), but it is actually 136 metres, or 449 feet, tall. That makes it the 13th tallest church tower in the world, which is especially impressive when you consider how old it is, and might explain why it took 65 years to build. At the time of construction (and I haven't researched this thoroughly so correct me if I'm wrong) it would have been the second tallest in the world, and the one tower which was taller, on Lincoln Cathedral, collapsed in a storm in 1549, suggesting that the engineering was not as good (after all, England never has had the same level of storms as many other countries). Architecturally (in the artistic sense), however, Lincoln is well-regarded, and survives, albeit without its original 3 spires.

(St. Stephen's Cathedral) Wien, Picture 20, Edited…

03 Nov 2013 148
When I originally prepared the photos from this roll, I had forgotten what this was, so I just made the title another generic "Wien" photo. This is St. Stephen's Cathedral, or the Stephensdom, built and rebuilt in various forms between 1263 and 1511, although the two towers date to about 30 years earlier (the exact date isn't clear), as they had been from the second church on this site, as the Stephensdom is the third (or possibly fourth). The first known church, built between 1137 and 1160. One theory that some historians and archeologists have, though, is that there was an earlier church (or possibly pagan temple) as far back as the 4th Century, as in 2000 a cemetary carbon-dated to that period was found during an archeological dig. Normally, of course, cemetaries in Christian countries were adjacent to churches. However, the 4th Century was not well recorded enough to know for sure, as it was at the beginning of the "dark ages" of European history. The during later periods, there were catacombs, which were used until 1783, and these still exist. An estimated 11,000 bodies are kept there. Another cemetary (not the 4th Century one) also existed next to the cathedral until 1781, with its own separate chapel (more on this in a later post). There are also crypts that are still in use, but these are used for church officials, for example the Bishop's Crypt, which was used as recently as 2004 to inter Cardinal Franz Konig. On the more positive side, the Stephensdom first had an organ in 1334, which must have been a very impressive piece of technology at the time. In 1945, the Cathedral was burned, although not directly from battle (although the Nazi commandant of the city had unsuccessfully ordered the cathedral destroyed). Although the city was invaded and occupied by the Soviet army in the last two months of World War II, looters set fire to nearby shops, which spread to the cathedral. Fire and bombing had been anticipated, so protective shells made of bricks had been constructed around parts of the interior. However, these were not enough to save everything, and this included the organ that existed at the time (it isn't clear if it was the 1334 original). An electric organ was fitted in 1960, roughly eight years after the cathedral reopened, and this was replaced by a more traditional mechanical one in 1991.