Visiting the Cathedral at Cologne, Germany with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget
When Emperor Frederic Barbarossa had relics of the three magi who visited the infant Jesus transferred from Milan, Italy to Cologne, Germany in 1164, he created the need for a pilgrimage cathedral on an earlier religious site dating from the fourth century according to Cologne Cathedral written by Arnold Wolff.
The
Cathedral at Cologne soars above your head as you enter to the height of 142
feet (43.35 meters) in the nave; the cathedral dwarfs the visitor. Wide lateral aisles allow for great numbers
of pilgrims to circulate around the main altar holding the golden shrine of the
three magi, which resembles a basilica with a towering central nave with lower
sides. However, the shrine is three
separate shrines set together in this fashion.
The resemblance to a basilica is incidental.
The presence
of the relics of the three magi caused this immense cathedral to be built, but
the homilies delivered by its great scholar priests have made it a center of
scholarship and piety as well. The
Dominican priest Albert Magnus (1206 – 1280) taught at Cologne as did Meister
Eckhart (1260 – 1328) and the Scottish Franciscan Duns Scotus (1266 -1308).
Albert
Magnus was famous for his defense of the mendicant orders and a famous
professor of theology, philosophy, and natural science. His most famous student was Saint Thomas
Aquinas (1225 – 1274).
Meister
Eckhart is most famous as a mystic, who had a head for business. His homilies are written in simple and
elegant German according to The New
Advent Encyclopedia.
John Duns
Scotus was an early supporter of the Immaculate Conception of Mary.
Lofty
theological debate and philosophical discussion still take place in Cologne as you
witness groups of prelates bustling around the cathedral deep in
discussion. However, there is great
charm at the cathedral in Cologne as well.
The day my husband Laurent and I visited a group of schoolchildren were
touring with their teachers. They
stopped by the shrine of the three magi.
When their teachers explained what it was, they lifted their eyes upward
with their mouths open.
Cologne Cathedral
inspires awe among the faithful of many generations.
By Ruth Paget, Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Click here for: Ruth Paget's Amazon Books
Click here for: Ruth Paget's Amazon Books