St. Cecilia's Church, Cologne

St. Cecilia's Church (Cäcilienkirche, Colognian pronunciation: [tsɪnˈtsila]) is one of the twelve Romanesque churches in Cologne’s old city, maintained by the Foundation of Romanesque Churches in Cologne. The present building, little changed since its inception, dates from 1130-60.[1] Since 1956, the church has been the home of the Schnütgen Museum for medieval art.[2]

St. Cecilia's Church
Cäcilienkirche
Religion
AffiliationRoman Catholic
RegionCologne
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusParish church
StatusSchnütgen Museum
(occasionally active church)
Location
StateNorth Rhine-Westphalia
Architecture
TypeChurch
StyleRomanesque

Building Description

Interior view of St. Cäcilien
Floorplan of St. Cäcilien

The floorplan of Saint Cecilia's is that of a simple, three-aisled church without towers or transepts. The southernmost aisle and the centre of the nave end in a rounded apse. The northern aisle ends in an apse used as a sacristy, built in 1479. In the upper choir of the middle aisle are frescoes, difficult to see clearly, that were damaged during world war two. The original, arched wooden roof in the middle aisle remains on the site. and the tympanum dates from 1160, which can be viewed as part of the museum’s collection. A copy of it can be seen from outside, at the north entrance.

History

The origin of the church building stems from the 9th century, during which a women’s home of the same name was founded at the site, during the reign of Archbishop Willibert in 870-888. It was built on the ruins of a prior Roman bath.[3] Previously, it was suggested that the first Cologne Cathedral stood at the site, but archaeological evidence has since ruled out this possibility. From documentation of the home in 965, it is known that Bruno the Great, archbishop of Cologne, designated 50 pounds of silver for the completion of the church building. The original was renovated in the 12th century to suit a romanesque style, and distinguishes itself from the other Romanesque churches in Cologne through its relatively modest size and decoration.

Through resources originally designated for another church, the interior of St Cecilia's was renovated during the late 15th century. The main entrance was also changed in the 19th century, and given a new entry in the Neo-Romantic style.[4] It remains on site, but is now walled up to suit the needs of the Schnütgen Museum.

For a time, the building was also adjacedent to the first hospital in Cologne, for which the church offered services as a chapel. The hospital is no longer present, as the Church now stands next to the Rautenstrauch-Joest Museum.

Though it is currently used mainly as museum of medieval art, the church celebrates two masses each year, one at Christmas and the other on the feast day of St. Cecilia.

gollark: I bet I could catch a few poorly programmed ones with some work, though.
gollark: It looks like the exploit bots I decided to have fun with by streaming osmarks internet radio™ at are just dropping the connection when I do that. Sad!
gollark: Visit osmarks.tk, so I can somewhat obsessively analyze your traffic™.
gollark: And someone on something which... inconclusively looks like Safari and Chrome on an Android device, but is also seemingly an actual browser... visited SPUDNET, but didn't log in.
gollark: This is immensely bizarre. Someone is visiting osmarks.tk with what looks like (based on user agent & traffic patterns) to be an actual browser, from the USA.

See also

References

  1. Walter Geis: Westfassade St. Cäcilien. In: Förderverein Romanische Kirchen Köln e. V. (Hrsg.): Colonia Romanica. Nr. VIII, Köln 1993, ISSN 0930-8555, page 121.
  2. Museums of Cologne; official website Archived 2009-12-27 at the Wayback Machine accessed January 11, 2010
  3. Wietzorek, Paul. Das Historische Köln. Michael Imhof Verlag, 2006. Page 151
  4. Wietzorek, Paul. Das Historische Köln. Michael Imhof Verlag, 2006. Page 153

Media related to St. Cäcilien at Wikimedia Commons

  • St. Cäcilien on Förderverein Romanische Kirchen Köln e.V. (in German)

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.