St Mary's Church

Rynek Główny 5,Kraków http://www.krakow.pl/english/instcbi/36882,inst,12407,1241,instcbi.html

About

The first mentions of St Mary's Church date back to 1222. It was then a Romanesque church functioning as the parish for the developing urban community. After the edifice was destroyed by Tartar raids, the second church was built in stages from 1288 lasting over the next few centuries, so that the church had not received its final form until the end of the 14th century. It is a Gothic brick basilica with three aisles in the so-called Kraków style, with the characteristic elongated and polygonally enclosed chancel. In 1423-1446, six chapels and two porches, founded by the families of rich burghers, were added between the buttresses of the aisles. Early in the 15th century, the taller tower – known as The Bugle Tower – received an octagonal extension, and in 1478: a late-Gothic spire by Maciej Heringk. The gilded crown was added in 1666. The spire of the lower tower dates back to the late 16th century. Being the main parish church of the town, St Mary's received donations from rich burgher families. It was thanks to their efforts and funds that most of the 16th and 17th-century furnishing, including the stalls, tomb slabs, and chapels were constructed. In middle-16th century, the late Renaissance ciborium (a freestanding decorative altar canopy) was built of marble and alabaster by Giovanni Maria Padovano on the right-hand side of the entrance to the chancel. In the mid-18th century, the energetic Father Jacek Łopacki, the Archpresbyter of the Parish Church, began the far-going baroquisation of the interior. Its changes were removed during the conservation works carried out in 1887-1892, which aimed at returning St Mary's to its Gothic appearance to the greatest degree possible: this included the uncovering and reconstruction of the 14th-century appearance of the walls and ceilings in the nave and aisles. At the same time, the star-strewn paintings decorating the vaulting and the walls received their plant motifs and the devices of the guilds painted by Jan Matejko together with his disciples: Józef Mehoffer and Stanisław Wyspiański. The latter two, at the time beginner artists, were also the designers of the stained-glass western window. Yet the most precious of all the historic heritage in St Mary's is the high altar: the most well known and best preserved work of late Gothic sculpture in this part of Europe. When the roof and ceiling of the chancel collapsed in the first half of the 15th century, the old altar was destroyed. The aldermen of the city decided to commission a new one – magnificent and worthy of the royal capital city – from the Nuremberg sculptor, Veit Stoss (Wit Stwosz). The master moved to Kraków and received a generous reward, worth at least the equivalent of the annual budget of the city. Works on the altar continued from 1477 to 1489. In the 18 huge bas-reliefs on the movable wings of the altar, Master Stwosz depicted the most important scenes from the life of Mary and Christ. The central, fixed part of the pentaptych (the corpus) contains a realistically portrayed scene of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary surrounded by 12 Apostles, with the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin above, and the Coronation of Mary by the Holy Trinity assisted by the patron saints of Poland – St Adalbert and St Stanislaus – in the crowning of the altar. Stoss made this 11 m (36 ft) wide and 13 m (43 ft) tall structure from oaken wood that was already 500 years old in his days. (Which means that today it is 1000 years old!) The master sculptor decided to chisel the larger-than-life, 2.8 metres-high (9 ft) painted and gilded figures in lime (linden) wood. On the eve of the outbreak of the second world war, the altar was disassembled and transported by the Vistula River to Sandomierz. Alas! Someone must have betrayed its hiding place to the occupant, and the altar was transported deep into the Third Reich. Discovered by Karol Estreicher – ironically in Nuremberg – it was returned to Kraków just after the war. After painstaking c

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