Bamberk Domstrasse 5 (Tilman2007) Bamberk Domstrasse 5 (Tilman2007)

Bamberg - Curia Sti. Lamperti

The former canonical court of Curia Sti. Lamperti built according to plans by Leonhard Dientzenhofer in 1706

The former canonry court, Curia Sti. Lamperti, consists of a main oblong two-storey building with a gabled roof and a chapel. It was probably built according to plans by Leonhard Dientzenhofer in 1706.

Detailed information

History

The former canonry court, Curia Sti. Lamperti, consists of a main oblong two-storey building with a gabled roof and a chapel. It was probably built according to plans by Leonhard Dientzenhofer in 1706. The outbuildings date from the 18th century and include remains from the late medieval period. The garden dates from the turn of the 18th-19th century.

Domberg

The Domberg is the most famous of Bamberg's seven hills and also the longest inhabited part of the city.

The Domberg is the historic core of Bamberg and was the centre of the empire at the time of Emperor Henry II (1002/1014-24). The unique historical ensemble of former court, chapter and canonry buildings on Domplatz Square is dominated by the 1000-year-old cathedral.

The history of the settlement of Domberg dates back to the Bronze Age, but it only became important after the fortification of the Babenbergs with the castle "Castrum Babenberch", which gave Bamberg its name (it is mentioned in documents in 902). With the foundation of the bishopric in 1007, the construction of the cathedral (1002) and the expansion of the castle into a bishop's palace, Henry II laid the foundations for the further development of Bamberg.

With the demise of the monastic community of cathedral canons in the 13th century, numerous canonry courts sprang up along the walls and roads. The lavish collection of buildings, most of which still survive today, included the old court of the bishops and princely bishops with the remains of the palace building, the medieval and baroque canonry courts, the new residence of the prince-bishops and the magnificent chapter house in the cathedral.

The Cathedral of St. Peter and St. George, founded in 1002, dominates the unique historical ensemble of former court, chapter and canonry buildings on the Cathedral Square.

The canonry courts, curiae

The apartments for the cathedral chaplains were called canonry courts or "curiae". Canonry courts were usually representative detached buildings.

At Domberg they were designed as separate, externally enclosed complexes and organized as adjoining three- or four-sided courts. The largest courts still have a floor area of 3,000 square metres.

In the late Middle Ages, the cathedral courtyards covered most of the cathedral hill, and only in the modern period were some of them displaced by the buildings of the princely residences.

Each of Bamberg's cathedral curiae had its own chapel, which, at least in the early period, also gave its name to the court, and was rarely recognisable as a separate building but was integrated into the buildings. The oldest surviving chapel in the Laurentian Curia was built around 1200, with most of the buildings dating from the 15th-16th and 18th centuries:

Cathedral Square 1: Curia Sti. Hippolyti (18th century, private property)
Cathedral Square 2: Curia St. Sebastiani et Fabiani (18th century, archbishop's ordinariate)
Domplatz 3, Curia St. Laurentii (12th and 15th/16th century, archbishop's ordinariate)
Domstraße 2, Curia Sti. Blasii (16th century)
Domstraße 3, Curia Stm. Mariae et Chunegundis (15th century Baroque, cathedral rectory)
Domstraße 5, Curia St. Lamperti (18th century, cathedral rectory)
Domstraße 7, Curia Stae. Elisabethae (15th/16th century)
Domstraße 9, Curia Stm. Johannis et Pauli (15th century)
Domstraße 11, former Erthalshof (15th-18th centuries)
Domstraße 13, former Truchseßhöflein (16th century)
Obere Karolinenstraße 1/3, Curia Schönborniana (15th century)
Obere Karolinenstraße 4/6, Curia Stm. Philipp et Jacobi (16th/19th century; cathedral school)
Obere Karolinenstraße 5, Curia Sti. Pauli (18th century, archbishop's palace)
Obere Karolinenstraße 7, former Zobelhof (18th century)

With secularization, canons lost their curiae unless they owned them privately.

Current

In the area of Curia Sti. Lamperti is currently the premises of the Archbishopric of Bamberg for education.

Map of the place and surroundings Open on mapy.cz

GPS: 49.8906711N, 10.8812033E
Curia Sti. Lamperti