I was a little nervous about navigating through the transit system by myself since I don't speak German, but I was just fine. I did end up sitting in first class on accident, though, and I had to change seats about halfway through the ride there!
As I wandered through the streets of Hildesheim, I tried to find the cathedral by looking for tall church towers. The first building I came across was the church St. Andreas (which incidentally has the tallest church tower in Lower Saxony). The outside of the church depicts this monument in honor of the Reformer Johannes Bugenhagen (1485-1558).
I was struck by how the figures on the fountain seemed similar to the proportions and Ottoman style of the bronze doors, and I wondered if there was an intentional choice to have a cohesive aesthetic between churches in the city.
The Hildesheim Cathedral!
This is the place where the doors originally would have been placed on the west side of the cathedral. They now are located inside the doors in a little faux narthex meant just to showcase the doors. I know that these doors were able to escape damage when Hildehseim was bombed in an air raid in 1945 - the doors were removed to the Kehrwieder in the southeast of the old city in 1942. The doors weigh several tons, and had to be carefully transported on a stable scaffold by two teams of horses. Since the doors spend their time underground during they war, they were not damaged! My assumption is that the doors were placed inside the cathedral after the war ended.
Interior of the cathedral
The doors! I probably spent about hour looking at these doors and photographing small details that I had never noticed before.
I never noticed that Joseph is holding a little dove (as an offering) in this panel
It was neat to see how far the images protrude from the surface of the door into the space of the viewer.
I was also surprised to see how thin these doors are! What an amazing technical achievement to cast something so tall and so thin, especially since each of these doors was cast as a single unit!
Inside the cathedral is Bernward's Column (also called "Christ's Column"), which was made about the same time as the doors. The scenes on the doors depict events surrounding the life of John the Baptist and the ministry of Christ. These events chronologically "fill in" the New Testament scenes that are not shown on the bronze doors themselves.
I did notice, however, that the craftsmanship of the bronze column is not as refined as that on the doors.
Salome dancing so she can ask for the head of John the Baptist
After visiting the cathedral and the cathedral museum, I walked over to St. Michael's Monastery, which possibly is the place that originally housed the bronze doors starting in 1015. It is presumed that the doors would have been in place when Bernward commissioned the crypt in 1015 (see Cohen and Derbes, "Bernward and Eve at Hildesheim," GESTA, 2001, p. 19). Bernward is buried here, so I felt like it was appropriate to go and pay homage to the bishop who commissioned the bronze doors. The Bronze doors may have been moved to the cathedral by Bernward's successor Gotthard in either 1022 or 1035 (the latter date was first argued by Franz Dibelius in "Die Bernwardstür zu Hildesheim, Strassburg: Heitz," 1907, p. 78-80).
This was a special and unforgettable day. I'm so glad that I got to visit these doors and spend some time in this smaller German city.







