The
Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Wrocław, (, ), is the seat of the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Wrocław and a landmark of the city of
Wrocław in
Poland. The
cathedral, located in the
Ostrów Tumski district, is a
Gothic church with
Neo-Gothic additions. The current standing cathedral is the fourth church to have been built on the site.
A first church at the location of the present cathedral was built under
Přemyslid rule in the mid 10th century, a
fieldstone building with one
nave about in length, including a distinctive
transept and an
apse. After the Polish conquest of
Silesia and the founding of the Wrocław diocese under the
Piast duke
Bolesław I Chrobry about 1000, this
Bohemian church was replaced by a larger basilical structure with three naves, a
crypt, and towers on its eastern side. The first cathedral was however soon destroyed, probably by the invading troops of Duke
Bretislaus of Bohemia around 1039. A larger,
Romanesque-style church was soon built in its place in the times of Duke
Casimir I, and expanded similar to
Płock Cathedral on the behest of Bishop
Walter of Malonne in 1158.
After the end of the
Mongol invasion, the church was again largely rebuilt in the present-day
Brick Gothic style. It was the first building of the city to be made of brick when construction of the new
choir and
ambulatory started in 1244. The nave with
sacristy and the basements of the prominent western steeples were added under Bishop
Nanker until 1341.On June 19, 1540,...
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