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The Bamberg Cathedral Toads (Domkröte)
During the Bamberg cathedral's construction the Devil was sent to have sent two terrible beasts, half lion and half toad, who worked during the nighthours to burrow beneath the cathedral and bring about its collapse. At some point they were turned to stone and now stand to the left and right of Adam's Door (Adamspforte).
Henry II, for his part, prostrated himself a number of times before the
bishops who were discussing the foundation of the bishopric of
Bamberg. It was a gesture of humble application, not the surrender one's honor
or rank.
After the negotiations over the foundation of the bishopric of Bamberg,
Bishop Henry of Würzburg confirmed an alliance with King Henry
II "secretly through the transmission of his crosier".

An angel of the
last judgment on the Prince's Portal (Fürstenpforte) of the Bamberg Cathedral

Abraham Holding Four Souls to his Bosom Bamberg Cathedral
Fürstenpforte
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The Bamberg Cathedral in a
hand-tinted photo from the late 19th Century
Introduction
The four tower cathedral (Dom in German) is mainly Gothic but with strong Romanesque influences -- the plans were changed twenty times during construction as traditionalists argued with progressives over the suitability of the new French Gothic style. The result is one of the most impressive medieval buildings in Germany.
Bamberg was especially important during the Ottonian through Gothic
periods. A small settlement seems to existed on the site
since the seventh century, but Bamberg was essentially founded in the early 11th
century when the Holy Roman Emperor Henry II and his wife, the Empress
Kunigunde, established a bishopric there in 1007, that meant that the
church in the community gained the status of becoming a "cathedral" - Dom in
German. This made Bamberg one of the last cathedrals to be
founded in the early middle ages. Henry II hoped
to create a "new Rome" in the eastern part of his domain, and to this end a
cathedral, palace, markets, and settlement were built, forming a center of
imperial power. The starting point for the development was his own
ancestral castle, which he offered to the new city. At the base of the
castle, on
the Regnitz river, was a settlement of fishermen which was
also visited
by merchants. This castle, called Castrum Babenberg,
had previously belonged to the Babenbergs and
gave its name to the new settlement. The castle's
fortifications were
preserved for the defense of the cathedral precinct that was built at
the top
of the hill. These fortifications had two gates, in whose
upper stories
chapels were later built, one led up to the Steigerwald forest and one
down
to the ford across the river.
Construction on the cathedral started in 1004 and finished eight years
later in 1012. The cathedral was consecrated on Henry II's
fortieth birthday on May 6, 1012. Virtually the entire royal
church was present at the consecration of
the
Bamberg Cathedral. Thirty-six bishops attended and in
addition "an
unbelievable crowd of clerics and laity" were there assembled; many
who
would have been in disfavor with the king returned to his grace.
The cathedral quickly became well known not for any
monumentality
of its construction, but for the beautiful paintings that decorated its
interior. Henry II showed his devotion to his foundation by lavishing gifts on Bamberg
cathedral, including investments, especially and embroidered coat known
as
the Sternenmantel -
the Star Cloak - for its unique star design
(on display in Bamberg, in the Diözesanmuseum), ivory book
covers, and
manuscripts. Along with the cathedral and scattered lands,
the Emperor
gave the new town a Benedictine monastery, St. Michael's
(Michelskirche), the
canonry of St. Steffens (the dormitory for the priests serving in the
cathedral), and probably the "upper parish church" as well. Later, St.
Gangolf and St. Jacob's were added.
The cathedral we see today in Bamberg bears little relation to the
building that was finished in 1012, instead today's cathedral is the
work of a time two hundred years later. This first cathedral
burned down in a great fire in 1081, that left only the walls standing.
(A synod was able to be held in the cathedral in 1087).
The new cathedral that was built in its place, was completed in 1111.
It was finished under the direction of Bishop Otto (see side
panel), who as Emperor Henry IV's chancellor, had gained
experience in building cathedrals after directing, and probably
working as artistic consultant for, the construction
of the
cathedral then being built in Speyer. The Speyer cathedral
was
the first in Germany to be built with a vaulted ceiling. But
in
Bamberg, Bishop Otto returned to the flat ceiling. Perhaps he
was
incorporating parts of the previous building into the new cathedral,
and these would not support a vaulted ceiling, or perhaps he simply
couldn't find qualified workers who had the knowledge to carry out such
innovative construction. Bishop Otto is said to have covered
the
inside walls of the new cathedral with paintings that were in no way
inferior to the first. Under his direction,
artisans also
added plaster (stucco) details to the inside columns, covered the
entire roof in copper (not before 1128), and raised the
flooring
of St. George's choir. But this cathedral too was badly
damaged
in a second fire in 1185 that raced through the entire hilltop distric,
although once again the outside walls seem to have survived.
From
the beginning, Henry II's plan was to create a crown of churches
up
along the ascent of the hill, and in later centuries this plan was
continually renewed and altered. Down through the centuries,
this
fortified hill area has maintained the essential parts of the
architectural
order it had from the beginning. The contours of today's "Old
Palace"
still follow the layout of the first ducal palace. The
original palace
was not torn down until 1577. Most of the present-day
buildings visible
have Gothic and Renaissance origins. From the
original ducal
palace,
one used the side entrance to the cathedral, the present-day "Royal
Portal"
or "Prince's Portal" in English;- the Fürstenpforte
(pictured at left), facing Cathedral Square (Domplatz). It has ten recessed arches and an interesting sculpture of the last judgment.

The Last Judgement
above the door in the Prince's Portal (Fürstenpforte)
The Blessed on the left; The Damned on the right.
The Adam's Door (Adamspforte) on the south side, is the main entrance to the cathedral. The original statues of Adam and Eve, which decorated the Adamspforte were the first monumental nude sculptures in German art. today they can be seen in the Diocesan museum nearby.
The thought that the number of relics increased the power
and honor of
the church in which they were guarded appears frequently in the Middle
Ages. For the
eight altars of
the Bamberg Cathedral there were not just eight but 132 relics,
including a piece of Peter's
chains, blood of St. Paul, a piece of the sudarium of Christ (the
headcloth
used for his corpse), the head of St. Damian, as well as whole
skeletons are
individual bones of many of the saints. Thus Bamberg
Cathedral was a
sort of relic museum, and it was not the only one. Starting
in the
Carolingian, and especially in the late Middle Ages, relics were a
favorite
object of high-ranking collectors, and people thought about how to
acquire
very rare pieces which would particularly impress visitors.
The status of Bamberg was enhanced by the burial of the imperial couple
in
the cathedral that they had founded. An additional
consequential figure
associated with Ottonian Bamberg was Pope Clement II
(1046 -- 1047), who was
bishop of Bamberg before his elevation and was also buried in Bamberg
Cathedral.
Bamberg Cathedral's connections with both the Holy Roman Emperor and a
Pope
gave the church a unique character that continued to be reflected in
the
buildings decorative programs through the Middle Ages. The
importance
of the emperor and his wife was heightened by Henry's canonization in
1146
and Kunigunde is in 1200.
The tomb in the Bamberg Cathedral where their remains are preserved was
designed and executed by Hans Thielmann (circa 1500). Scenes
in
bas-relief on assigned to the sarcophagus represent St. Kunigunde
distributing alms to the poor, paying the architects and masons who
built the
cathedral, and undergoing the ordeal by fire. The death of
Henry II is
depicted, as also the supposed rescue of his soul by St. Lawrence.
Here
Henry and Kunigunde are represented together. This is the way
they are
normally represented, wearing imperial robes and a crown and holding a
lily
or a model of a church between them. This was no mere
artistic device,
for the Ottonian Dynasty ranked the empresses as co-regents of the
Empire. When depicted alone, St. Kunigunde sometimes holds a
church,
representing that of Kaufungen, or walks on the red hot plowshares (the
cutting blade of a plough), a reference to the legend that she had
undergone
this ordeal by fire when her chastity had been impugned.
The present cathedral, dedicated to St. Peter and St. George, was built
after a fire in 1183 under Bishop Ekbert von Andechs (1203-1237) and
consecrated once again on Henry II's birthday, on May 6,
1237. This church follows the general
plan of the
early Ottonian churches with two choirs. In fact, recent excavations
show
that
the first cathedral was almost the same size as
the one we see
today. Bishop Ekbert followed the original layout but refined
them.
There is a transept on the western end of the building and
four
exterior towers. Because of the double choir, the main
entrance to the
cathedral, the Prince's Portal (Fürstenpforte)
is located in the
middle of the nave's north side. The cathedral's interior
exhibits the
heavy mural surface and regular spatial organization typical of the
German
interpretation of Gothic architecture. In the Gothic style, through the
breaking up of wall surfaces, and the high relief of peers and
moldings, the
painter tended more and more to resign his task to the
sculptor:
innumerable niches had to be filled with freestanding examples
of the
plastic art. Inspired by that joyous acceptance of life in
its entirety
which was characteristic of the time, the sculptors threw themselves
with
devotion into the new task. The apostles on the choir screen
of the
Bamberg Cathedral are no longer ranked side by side in monumental
peace, as
in the representations of earlier times. One turns to the
other in
animated conversation. The artist tries to render the
diversity of
character and the conflict of opinion. He is not content with
the play
of gestures and of hands.
The
view of the Jews as blind to the truth and of the Christian church
as
superseding the synagogue is graphically expressed and symbolically
condensed
in a pair of 13th century statues representing the church and the
synagogue
outside of the Bamberg cathedral. The church is represented
as a noble
and proud maiden. She is crowned and holds the ecclesia in
one hand and
a staff in the other. In contrast the synagogue is
portrayed as
blindfolded, her crown fallen and her staff broken. Victory swells the
robe
of the triumphant Church, while that of the vanquished synagogue hangs
smoothly down (pictured at left).
The sculpture at Bamberg Cathedral represents one of the finest
ensembles in
any German cathedral. The work consists of three sculpted
portals: the
Mercy Portal (Gnadenpforte),
next to
the east choir on the north side; the Adam Portal (Adamspforte), also
next to the east choir
but on the south side; and the already mentioned Prince's Portal on the
north
side of the nave. Additional sculpture is found in the
interior of the
building, including the choir screen, figures placed against interior
columns, and tombs. Of the three portals, the work on the
Mercy Portal
is the earliest. It has a semicircular tympanum (arch above
doorway)
showing the Virgin and Child surrounded by the cathedral's patron
saints,
Peter and George, and it's builders, Henry II and Kunigunde, with two
smaller
scale ecclesiastics in the outer corners. The only other
sculpted
adornment on this portal is a capital frieze of marchers.
The interior sculpture at the cathedral includes a visitation group,
the
renowned Bamberg rider, and several other figures associated with the
Bamberg/Reims workshop. There are considerable problems with
the
original placement of much of the interior sculpture. The
rider is
presently positioned on the north pier in the entrance to the east
choir. He sits firmly on his horse looking away from the wall
with the
reins in one hand and the strings of his mantle and the other and seems
to
embody the knightly virtues so important in the medieval domestication
of
those who fight.

The Bamberg Rider has become one of the popular icons of German
medieval
art. The figure, horse, and plinth (base) are made of seven
pieces of
sandstone and represent a considerable technical achievement, although
the
rider's specific identity is uncertain. Stylistically the
figure
resembles the figure of Philip Augustus at Reims, and proposed
identifications include Henry II or another German ruler, Constantine,
the
first Christian emperor, and St. Stephen of Hungary, who was the
brother-in-law of Henry II. Most of the identifications would
support
the concepts of saintly ruler, church foundation, an association of
secular
and religious power, so important in the imagery at Bamberg
Cathedral.
There are significant parallels between the Bamberg Rider and a
slightly
later Magdeburg Rider. But unlike the Magdeburg Rider, the
Bamberg
Rider is not freestanding and may have always had an interior
placement.
Bamberg Cathedral continued to receive sculptural embellishments during
the
later Middle Ages. Wooden sculpted choir stalls dating from
around 1380
were originally present in both the east and the west choirs of the
cathedral. A frieze of Henry II and Kunigunde appear in the
decorative
program of the choir stalls along with saints, profits, and a
collection of
hybrid creatures. Tillman Riemannschneider sculpted the tomb
of Henry
II and Kunigunde between 1499 and 1513. Originally located in
the east
end of the nave, it consists of effigies of the emperor and sat on a
tomb
chest decorated with narrative panels of their lives, drawn mostly from
the
Golden Legend of Jacobus de Vorragine. A virgin altarpiece of 1523 by
Veit
Stoss, originally made for a Carmelite convent in Nuremberg, was
subsequently
transferred to Bamberg by Stoss' son during the reformation.
Most of the interior walls are bare today, because the Bavarian King Ludwig I stripped off the medieval paintwork in the 19th century.
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Otto - Bishop,
Missionary and
Saint.
Otto (circa 1068 -- 1139) was born into a noble family in
Swabia. He entered the service of the Emperor Henry IV and he
was
consecrated bishop of Bamberg in 1106. He proved to be a
dedicated
bishop and is credited with building several new churches and
monasteries and
with completing the
second Bamberg
Cathedral after the destruction of the first by
fire.
Although he tried to take a neutral
position in the
investiture controversy, for a short time he was suspended from his
duties in
1118. The conflict is only finally resolved with the
Concordat of Worms
in 1122. He is mainly remembered today for his highly
successful
missionary journey among the people of Pomerania. He was
canonized 50
years after his death.
The Breastplate of Aaron
The statue of Pope
Clement II in the
Bamberg Cathedral. He is wearing the pectoral of Aaron with twelve
gemstones.
Viewing the statue
of Pope Clement II (1046
-- 1047), one notes the
presence of the breastplate of Aaron, the ornament of the high priest
that the Pope was wearing as a pectoral. The twelve gemstones
were
originally colored, and must have been very prominent. The
jeweled
breastplate is worn on top of a pallium itself, a clear statement that
his pope he is the new Aaron, the new high priest. The statue
is
dated to the 13th century, about 1240, but such dating is not
precise.
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