Worms Cathedral: dove Lutero sfidò l’imperatore, e dove secondo la leggenda due regine litigarono scatenando la caduta di un regno
La cattedrale di San Pietro a Worms, insieme a quelle di Magonza e Spira, è tra i massimi esempi di architettura romanica in Germania: la parte occidentale fu rinnovata tra il 1125-1130 e il 1144, la navata tra il 1160 e il 1170, e nel 1181 l’edificio fu consacrato. La cattedrale fu il luogo di sepoltura della dinastia salica, la casata di imperatori del Sacro Romano Impero che possedette un castello a Worms fino all’XI secolo. Ma è un evento del 1521 a rendere Worms cruciale nella storia europea: qui si tenne la dieta imperiale convocata dall’imperatore Carlo V, davanti alla quale Martin Lutero, chiamato a ritrattare le proprie tesi, rifiutò di farlo a meno di essere convinto dalla Scrittura o dalla ragione, pronunciando secondo la tradizione le celebri parole “Qui sto, non posso fare altrimenti”. Sul lato nord della cattedrale si trova il Kaiserportal, il portale imperiale: secondo il poema epico medievale Nibelungenlied, fu proprio qui che Kriemhilde e sua cognata Brunilde litigarono su chi avesse il diritto di entrare per prima nel portale — una lite che, nella leggenda, portò all’assassinio di Sigfrido e al crollo del regno di Borgogna.
About Worms Cathedral
St Peter’s Cathedral in Worms, together with the cathedrals of Mainz and Speyer, ranks among the most magnificent surviving examples of Romanesque church architecture anywhere in Germany. A new cathedral was constructed in the Early Romanesque style under Bishop Burchard, who held the see from 1000 to 1025 and is regarded as the most significant of all the bishops of Worms; the building’s western sections were substantially renewed between 1125-1130 and 1144, the nave followed between 1160 and 1170, and by 1181 work on the west choir had progressed sufficiently for the completed cathedral to be formally consecrated. For centuries, Worms Cathedral served as the burial site of the Salian dynasty, the medieval German royal line that produced several Holy Roman Emperors and had held a castle in Worms until the 11th century, making the cathedral one of the principal imperial mausoleums of the medieval German-speaking world. The cathedral’s central role in wider European history, however, rests above all on a single event of 1521: the Diet of Worms, an imperial assembly convened by the newly elected Emperor Charles V, before which the reformer Martin Luther was summoned to renounce or reaffirm the views he had set out following Pope Leo X’s papal bull against him. Questioned before the assembled Diet, Luther refused to recant unless convinced of error by Scripture or reason, declaring his conscience bound to the Word of God — reportedly concluding with the words “Here I stand; I can do no other.” The subsequent Edict of Worms, issued by Charles V on 25 May 1521, formally condemned Luther as a heretic and outlaw, though rising public support among the German people and the protection of sympathetic German princes ultimately meant the edict was never effectively enforced. The cathedral also carries deep roots in German literary legend: its north side houses the Kaiserportal, or Emperor’s Portal, identified in the medieval epic poem the Nibelungenlied as the site of the fateful quarrel between Kriemhild and her sister-in-law Brünhild over precedence in entering the church — a dispute that, in the poem, ultimately precipitates the murder of the hero Siegfried and the collapse of the Burgundian kingdom.
Key facts
- 1000-1025: new cathedral built under Bishop Burchard
- 1125-1170: western sections and nave substantially rebuilt
- 1181: cathedral formally consecrated
- Burial site of the Salian dynasty of Holy Roman Emperors
- 1521: Diet of Worms; Martin Luther refuses to recant before Emperor Charles V
- 25 May 1521: Edict of Worms condemns Luther as a heretic and outlaw
- Kaiserportal: legendary site of the queens’ quarrel in the Nibelungenlied
History
As the burial site of the Salian dynasty, Worms Cathedral occupies a central place among the great imperial cathedrals of the medieval Holy Roman Empire, its Romanesque architecture directly comparable to the equally significant cathedrals of Speyer and Mainz built under the same dynasty’s patronage across the Rhineland. The 1521 Diet of Worms, and Luther’s defiant stand before Emperor Charles V, ranks among the single most consequential moments in the entire history of the Protestant Reformation, permanently associating this Rhineland cathedral city with the birth of a religious movement that would reshape the political and spiritual map of Europe.
The Kaiserportal’s identification as the setting for the Nibelungenlied’s queens’ quarrel connects Worms Cathedral directly to one of the foundational works of medieval German literature, embedding a real, physically visible portal within one of the most influential legendary narratives in the entire German literary tradition, later drawn upon by Richard Wagner for his Ring Cycle operas.
What you see
The cathedral’s Romanesque exterior, developed in stages from the early 11th century through its 1181 consecration, presents twin apses at both the east and west ends, a design distinctive among major German Romanesque cathedrals. The Kaiserportal on the north side, associated with the Nibelungenlied legend, remains a significant architectural and literary landmark, while the cathedral’s interior preserves the tombs associated with the Salian imperial dynasty alongside later medieval and Baroque additions.
Practical information
- Opening hours: generally open daily with seasonal variation; free admission; check current hours before visiting
- Address: Platz der Partnerschaft 1, 67547 Worms, Germany
Getting there
Worms Cathedral stands in the centre of Worms, in Germany’s Rhineland-Palatinate, easily reachable on foot from Worms railway station. GPS: 49.6301° N, 8.3599° E.
Nearby
- Luther Memorial (Lutherdenkmal) — monument commemorating the Diet of Worms, nearby
- Old Jewish Cemetery of Worms — one of Europe’s oldest surviving Jewish cemeteries, part of the ShUM UNESCO sites
- Worms city centre — the historic town surrounding the cathedral
Sources
- Wikipedia — “Worms Cathedral” (en.wikipedia.org)
- Wikipedia — “Diet of Worms” (en.wikipedia.org)
- Worms erleben — “Imperial Cathedral in Worms” (worms-erleben.de)
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