St. Michael's Church, Hildesheim

The Church of St. Michael (German: Michaeliskirche) is an early-Romanesque church in Hildesheim, Germany. It has been on the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage list since 1985. It is now a shared church, the main church being Lutheran and the crypt being Roman Catholic.

St. Michael's
Church of St. Michael's
  • German: Michaeliskirche
  • or simply Sankt Michael
St. Michaelis in 2009, view from southeast
St. Michael's
Location within Lower Saxony
52°09′10″N 09°56′37″E
LocationHildesheim
CountryGermany
Denominationshared church (Lutheran and Catholic)
Websitemichaelis-hildesheim.wir-e.de/kirche
History
Statusparish church
Dedication
Consecrated1022
Architecture
Functional statusactive
Architectural typebasilica with 2 quires and 2 transepts
StyleRomanesque
Gothic (southern side windows)
Groundbreakinglate 10th century
Completedlate 12th century (late 12th century)
Specifications
Lengthoverall: 74.75 metres (245.2 ft)
nave between crossings: 27.34 metres (89.7 ft)
transepts: 40.01 metres (131.3 ft)
Widthnave: 22.75 metres (74.6 ft)
transepts: 11.38 metres (37.3 ft)
Nave width8.6 metres (28 ft), centre nave
Nave height16.7 metres (55 ft)
Number of spires2 crossing towers and 4 side towers
Bells10
Administration
ParishKirchengemeinde St. Michaelis, Hildesheim
DeaneryHildesheim-Sarstedt (Kirchenkreis), Hildesheim (Dekanat)
SynodLutheran Church of Hanover, Diocese of Hildesheim
Clergy
ProvostLand Superintendent Eckhard Gorka, Hildesheim-Göttingen diocese
Official nameSt Michael's Lutheran Church
Part ofSt Mary's Cathedral and St Michael's Church at Hildesheim
CriteriaCultural: (i), (ii), (iii)
Reference187bis-001
Inscription1985 (9th session)
Extensions2008
Area0.58 ha (1.4 acres)
Buffer zone157.68 ha (389.6 acres)

History

Bishop Bernward of Hildesheim (996–1022) built a Benedictine monastery from the ground up on a hill linked with the archangel Michael just a half kilometer north of the city walls of his seat (Hildesheim), a monastery that featured an imposing church some 70 meters in length overall. Bernward set the first stone for the new church in 1010 and dedicated the still unfinished building to Michael on the archangel's feast day, 29 September 1022, just a few weeks before his death. Construction, however, continued under his successor, Bishop Godehard (died 1038), who completed the work in 1031 and reconsecrated the church to Michael on September 29 of that year. The church has double choirs east and west, double tripartite transepts at either end of the nave, and six towers—two large ones over the crossings east and west, and four other tall and narrow ones attached to the small sides of the two transepts. The eastern choir featured three apses, and the west had a deep chapel with a huge single apse rising high over an elaborate cross-vaulted hall crypt with an ambulatory. Bishop Bernward's remains were placed in the western crypt.

The monastery comprised a church family and had two other sanctuaries dedicated to Martin and the Holy Cross lying in the cloister that extended northward from St. Michael's north flank. The monastery and church opened southward toward the city of Hildesheim, its south flank comprising a facade of a sort. It seems likely that the monastery on the Hill of St. Michael was surrounded by a wall.[1]

In 1186, after a reconstruction following a fire, Hildesheim's Bishop Adelog of Dorstedt – assisted by Tammo, Prince-Bishop of Verden – reconsecrated St. Michael's.

When the people of Hildesheim became Protestant in 1542, St. Michael's became Lutheran, but the Benedictine monastery operated here until it was secularized in 1803. Monks continued to use the church, especially its western choir and crypt, down to that moment.

St. Michael's Church was heavily damaged in an air raid during World War II on 22 March 1945, but reconstruction was begun in 1950 and completed in 1957. In 1985, the church became a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage site, along with the Cathedral of Hildesheim, its collection of medieval treasures and its 1000-year-old rosebush.

Architecture

St. Michael's Church is one of the most important churches of early Christian period architecture. It is a double-choir basilica with two transepts and a square tower at each crossing. The west choir is emphasized by an ambulatory and a crypt. Nikolaus Pevsner wrote that St. Michael's "is the earliest surviving example of a truly Romanesque exterior."[2]

The ground plan of the building follows a geometrical conception, in which the square of the transept crossing in the ground plan constitutes the key measuring unit for the entire church. The square units are defined by the alternation of columns and piers. Pevsner described this as a "more thorough 'metrical system' " than found in any prior Romanesque architecture.[3]

The ceiling of the church is decorated with a fresco, 27.6 m long and 8.7 m wide, depicting the Tree of Jesse, the ancestral line of Jesus.[4] The famous Bernward Doors, featuring bronze reliefs of scenes from the Bible, were originally commissioned for St. Michael's but are now found at the nearby Cathedral of Hildesheim.[5]

The painted wooden ceiling in the nave (around 1230) shows the genealogy of Christ.

Measurements

  • Total length: 74.75 m
  • Total length of the transepts: 40.01 m
  • Total width of the transepts: 11.38 m
  • Length of the crypt: 18.36 m
  • Length of the nave: 27.34 m
  • Width of the nave incl. lower aisles: 22.75 m
  • Width of the nave without lower aisles: 8.60 m
  • Height of the nave without lower aisles: 16.70 m
  • Thickness of the walls: 1.63 m

Location

St. Michael's Church is situated at the Western rim of the city centre of Hildesheim, on the so-called Michaelishügel ("St. Michael's Hill"). The main entrance to the Church is at the south side. Magdalenengarten, a baroque park, is very close to the church in the west. The cloister is also accessible from there. It leads to the Church's contemporary (administrative) buildings. From the south and east of the Hill is Hildesheim's downtown, to the west is the River Innerste and in the north the Gymnasium Andreanum school.

Burials

See also

References

  1. Gerhard Lutz and Angela Weyer, eds., 1000 Jahre St. Michael in Hildesheim (Hildesheim: Hornemann Institut der HAWK, 2012)
  2. Pevsner, Nikolaus (1953). An Outline of European Architecture (5th ed.). Penguin. p. 51.
  3. Pevsner 1953, pp. 43–44.
  4. "St. Mary's Church and St. Michael's Church at Hildesheim". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. United Nations. Retrieved 7 January 2017.
  5. "Hildesheim Cathedral". Sacred Destinations. Retrieved 7 January 2017.
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