- Cathedral of Trier
Infobox World Heritage Site
WHS = Roman Monuments, Cathedral of St. Peter and Church of Our Lady in Trier
State Party = GER
Type = Cultural
Criteria = i, iii, iv, vi
ID = 367
Region = Europe and North America
Year = 1986
Session = 10th
Link = http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/367The Cathedral of Saint Peter,Trier ( _de. Trierer Dom), the seat of the Roman Catholic [ArchbishopBishop of Trier , in theRhineland-Palatinate , is the oldestcathedral inGermany . The edifice is notable for its extremely long life span under multiple different eras each constributing some elements to its design, including the center of the main chapel being made of Roman brick laid under the direction of Saint Helen, resulting in a cathedral added on to gradually rather than rebuilt in different eras. Its dimensions, 112.5 by 41 m, make it the largest church structure in Trier. Since 1986 it has been on the UNESCO list ofWorld Heritage Sites .History
The structure is raised upon the foundations of Roman buildings of Augusta Treverorum. Following the conversion of the
Emperor Constantine the BishopMaximin of Trier (329-346) coordinated the construction of the grandest ensemble of ecclesiastical structures in the West outside Rome: on a groundplan four times the area of the present cathedral no less than fourbasilica s, abaptistery and outbuildings were constructed; the four piers of the crossing formed the nucleus of the present structure.The fourth century structure was left in ruins by the
Franks and rebuilt.Normans destroyed the structure again in 882. Under Bishop Egbert the "Dom" was restored once more. The West front in five symmetrical sections remains typical ofRomanesque architecture under the Salian emperors. The West end choir, with its apsidal semi-cylinder expressed on the exterior façade, was completed in 1196. The interior is of three Romanesquenave s with Gothic vaulting, and a Baroque chapel for the relic of theSeamless robe of Jesus , recovered from the interior of the high altar in 1512, complete the interior.External links
* [http://www.sacred-destinations.com/germany/trier-cathedral.htm History]
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