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Trier Cathedral

Cathedral of Trier
High Cathedral of Saint Peter in Trier
Trier Dom BW 1.JPG
49°45′22″N 6°38′35″E / 49.75611°N 6.64306°E / 49.75611; 6.64306Coordinates: 49°45′22″N 6°38′35″E / 49.75611°N 6.64306°E / 49.75611; 6.64306
Location Liebfrauenstraße 12
Trier, Rhineland-Palatinate
Country Germany
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website www.dominformation.de
History
Relics held Holy Robe
Architecture
Status Cathedral
Functional status Active
Heritage designation UNESCO World Heritage Site
Designated 1986
Style Romanesque
Years built c.270 (first building)
Groundbreaking 1235 (current building)
Completed 1270
Specifications
Materials Roman brick
Administration
Diocese Trier
Province Cologne
Clergy
Bishop(s) The Rt Revd Dr Stephan Ackermann
Provost Werner Rössel

The High Cathedral of Saint Peter in Trier (German: Hohe Domkirche St. Peter zu Trier), or Cathedral of Trier (German: Trierer Dom), is a Roman Catholic church in Trier, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is the oldest cathedral in the country. The edifice is notable for its extremely long life span under multiple different eras each contributing 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 onto gradually rather than rebuilt in different eras. Its dimensions, 112.5 m length by 41 m width, make it the largest church structure in Trier. In 1986 it was listed as part of the Roman Monuments, Cathedral of St. Peter and Church of Our Lady in Trier UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The structure is raised upon the foundations of Roman buildings of Augusta Treverorum. Following the conversion of the Emperor Constantine the Bishop Maximin 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 four basilicas, a baptistery 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 Archbishop Egbert (d. 993) it was restored once more.


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