The new abbey church at Fulda, dedicated …

Years: 1712 - 1712

The new abbey church at Fulda, dedicated on August 15, 1712, stands on the site of the Ratgar Basilica (once the largest basilica north of the Alps), which was the burial site of Saint Boniface and the church of Fulda Abbey, functions which the new building is intended to continue.

The plans of the new church had been drawn up in 1700 by one of the greatest German Baroque architects, Johann Dientzenhofer, who had been commissioned by the Prince-Abbot Adalbert von Schleifras for the new building on the recommendation of the Pope after Dientzenhofer's study trip to Rome in 1699.

The deliberate similarity of the church's internal arrangement to that of St. Peter's Basilica in Rome is testimony to Dientzenhofer's visit.

The Ratgar Basilica has been demolished to make way for the new Baroque structure, on which construction had begun on April 23, 1704, using in part the foundations of the earlier basilica.

The shell had been completed in 1707, the roof finished in 1708, and the interior in 1712.

The dedication tablet placed on the facade by von Schleifras gives the dedication as Christus Salvator.

Fulda Cathedral (Photo by Florian K., 2004)

Fulda Cathedral (Photo by Florian K., 2004)

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