Wawel Cathedral
Wawel Cathedral | |
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South view |
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Construction year: | 1000 |
Inauguration: | 1000 |
Style elements : | Romanesque , Gothic , Renaissance , Mannerism , Baroque |
Client: | Catholic Church |
Location: | 50 ° 3 '16 " N , 19 ° 56' 7" E |
Address: |
Wawel Krakow Poland |
Purpose: | Roman Catholic castle church |
Diocese : | Krakow |
The Royal Basilica and Arch-Cathedral of Saints Stanislaus and Wenceslas on Wawel Hill ( Polish : Bazylika archikatedralna św. Stanisława i św. Wacława ) in Krakow , also known as Wawel Cathedral (Polish: katedra wawelska ), has a thousand-year history as the cathedral of the Diocese of Cracow, established in the year 1000 (archdiocese from 1925) . It is considered a Polish national shrine because it served as the place of coronation and marriages of Polish monarchs, as the burial place of most of the kings of Poland and their families, as well as the bishops and archbishops of Krakow , some national heroes and most famous artists of Poland.
location
The cathedral is located outside the old town of Krakow on a limestone formation called Wawel Hill, which rises about 25 meters above the left bank of the Vistula . On the platform of the hill, protected by high walls and towers as a fortress, the cathedral is part of a diverse architectural ensemble that has been built there over the centuries around the medieval residence of the dukes and kings of Poland - Wawel Castle - and around the cathedral. The place, whose special position is underlined by its elevated position high above the city, is of particular importance for Poland, since it was the ruler's residence from the 11th to the 16th century and thus the center of secular power and at the same time the residence of the bishop from Krakow and through the cathedral was the center of spiritual power, which became a national shrine as the burial place of saints, kings, princes, bishops and heroes. No wonder then that the cathedral was considered the “apple of the eye” of the Jagiellonians .
history
There were two previous buildings on the site of the current church: the St. Wenceslas Cathedral from 1020 (destroyed in 1038 by the Czech prince Břetislav) and the three-aisled Romanesque cathedral, consecrated in 1142, with the grave of St. Bishop and martyr Stanislaus from Szczepanów.
This building fell victim to a fire in 1305; only the St. Leonhard's crypt remained. A few years later, Bishop Nanker began building a Gothic cathedral, which was completed in 1346, after 40 years of construction. Since Krakow was Poland's capital until 1609 and the royal palace stood on Wawel Hill, the cathedral also served as the court church and Poland's kings were buried in the crypt.
Several chapels were added to the cathedral after the Middle Ages. On the south wall of the cathedral, Bartholomeo Berrecci from Florence created the Sigismund Chapel (1517–1533) on behalf of King Sigismund I the Elder. The domed chapel on a square floor plan is significant in terms of art history. There are the graves of King Sigismund I and his children, King Sigismund II August and Anna Jagiellonica . A plastic representation of himself on a tumba by Veit Stoss has been preserved from King Casimir IV. Andrew . A grave slab by the artist Hermann Vischer the Younger commemorates Cardinal Friedrich Jagiello . Another important tomb comes from Władysław I. Ellenlang from the first half of the 14th century. The tomb for King Stephan Báthory is located in the Lady Chapel , which was erected around 1594 by the Italian sculptor Santi Gucci .
In the Sigismund bell tower, built in the second half of the 14th century as part of the fortifications, there is the most venerable bell in Poland, called "Sigismundus". Poland's holy Queen Jadwiga (Hedwig of Poland) was buried in the cathedral in 1399. In the 17th century the mausoleum of St. Stanislaus erected.
In the 18th century, parts of the building and the interior were given a Baroque style . From 1964 to 1978 the Krakow Kathedra was the episcopal church of Cardinal Karol Wojtyła (later Pope John Paul II ), who was Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Krakow during this period. In 1946 he had already celebrated his primacy in the Leonhard Crypt .
Interior decoration
1. Sigismundus Bell Tower |
13. Załuski Chapel |
Furnishing
organ
The organ goes back to an instrument that was built between 1502 and 1506. In the course of time the organ has been restored, reorganized and expanded several times. Today it has 32 stops on two manuals and a pedal .
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- Coupling I / P, II / P
Bells
Tombs in Wawel Cathedral
The Wawel Cathedral is the burial place of the Polish monarchy and other important personalities.
In the church
The bones of the following members of the Polish royal families are buried in or below high tombs or altars of the Wawel Cathedral:
- Ladislaus I, King of Poland (1260-1333)
- Casimir III the Great, King of Poland (1310-1370)
- Hedwig I, Queen of Poland (1373-1399)
- Ladislaus II Jagiełło, King of Poland (1348–1434)
- Ladislaus III, King of Poland (1424–1444) - only cenotaph
- Casimir IV, King of Poland (1427–1492)
- Johann I. Albrecht, King of Poland (1459–1501)
- Elisabeth of Austria , Queen of Poland (1437–1505) - wife of King Casimir IV.
Royal crypts
Other members of the Polish royal families were buried in the interconnected and accessible rooms of the so-called royal crypts, which can be entered via the Czartoryski chapel . Some other Polish personalities have also found their final resting place in the royal crypts:
Crypt of St. Leonhard
- Michael I. Korybut Wiśniowiecki, King of Poland (1640–1673)
- Johann III. Sobieski, King of Poland (1629–1696)
- Maria Kazimiera Sobieska , Queen of Poland (1641–1716) - wife of John III. Sobieski
- Józef Antoni Poniatowski (1763-1813)
- Tadeusz Kościuszko (1746-1817)
- Władysław Sikorski (1881-1943)
Stephan Báthory's crypt
- Stefan I. Báthory, King of Poland (1533–1586)
Ladislaus IV's crypt.
- Princess Anna Maria Isabella Wasa (1642–1642) - daughter of King Ladislaus IV.
- Prince Sigismund Kasimir Wasa (1640–1647) - son of King Ladislaus IV.
- Cäcilia Renata of Austria , Queen of Poland (1611–1644) - second wife of King Ladislaus IV.
- Ladislaus IV, King of Poland (1595–1648)
Crypt under the southern ambulatory
- Barbara Zápolya , Queen of Poland (1495–1515) - wife of King Sigismund I.
- Sigismund II August, King of Poland (1520–1572) - son of King Sigismund I.
- Anna Jagiellonica, Queen of Poland (1523–1596) - daughter of King Sigismund I , wife of Stephan Báthory
- Anna of Austria , Queen of Poland (1573–1598) - first wife of King Sigismund III.
- Princess Anna Maria Wasa (1593–1600) - daughter of King Sigismund III.
- Prince Alexander Karl Wasa (1614–1634) - son of King Sigismund III.
- August II the Strong, King of Poland, Elector of Saxony (1670–1733)
- Stanislaus I. Leszczyński, King of Poland (1677–1766)
Crypt under the Sigismund Chapel
- Sigismund I, King of Poland (1467–1548)
Crypt under the Wasa Chapel
- Constanze of Austria , Queen of Poland (1588–1631) - second wife of King Sigismund III.
- Sigismund III, King of Sweden and Poland (1566–1632)
- Prince Johann Albert Wasa , Cardinal (1612–1634) - son of King Sigismund III.
- Prince Johann Sigismund Wasa (1652–1652) - son of King John II Casimir
- Luisa Maria Gonzaga , Queen of Poland (1611–1667) - wife of King Ladislaus IV and John II Casimir
- John II Casimir, King of Poland (1609–1672)
Józef Piłsudski's crypt
- Józef Piłsudski (1867-1935)
Porch to the Piłsudski Crypt
- Lech Kaczyński (1949-2010)
- Maria Kaczyńska (1942-2010)
Poets crypt
Buried in the separately accessible poet's crypt are:
- Juliusz Słowacki (1809–1849)
- Adam Mickiewicz (1798–1855)
Bishop's crypt
Buried in the not publicly accessible bishop's crypt are u. a. the following bishops of the (arch) diocese of Krakow :
- Cardinal Albin Dunajewski (1817-1894)
- Cardinal Adam Stefan Sapieha (1867–1951)
- Cardinal Franciszek Macharski (1927-2016)
literature
- Michał Rożek: Krakowska katedra na Wawelu . Wydawnictwo św. Stanisława BM Archidiecezji Krakowskiej, Kraków 1989. (Polish)
- Karl Lind: The Jagellonen Chapel at the DOme in Krakow. In: Allgemeine Bauzeitung , year 1878, pp. 41-44 (online at ANNO ).
Web links
- Cathedral website (Polish / English)
- Wawel Cathedral in Krakow, Poland. Franks Online & Verlags GmbH, accessed on September 13, 2017 .
- Wawel Cathedral. Krakowskie Biuro Festiwalowe, accessed September 13, 2017 .
Individual evidence
- ↑ Jaroslaw Krawczyk: "On Poland and Poles"; Page 69; Bellona; Warszwa, 2004, ISBN 978-83-11-13546-8 .
- ↑ More information on Organy - Polskie Wirtualne Centrum Organowe (English).