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St. Martin's Concathedral

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St. Martin's Cathedral
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St. Martin's Cathedral

The St. Martin's Concathedral formerly St. Martin's Cathedral (in Slovak: Konkatedrála sv. Martina formerly Dóm sv. Martina or Katedrála sv. Martina), is a concathedral of Slovakia in Slovakia's capital Bratislava. It is the biggest and finest as well as one of the oldest churches of Bratislava known especially for previously being the coronation-church of the Kingdom of Hungary.

Location

Structure and Shape

Construction History

Window-pane
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Window-pane

Coronations

The cathedral became the coronation-church of the sovereigns of the Kingdom of Hungary in 1563, succeeding The Virgin Mary Church of Székesfehérvár, once Székesfehérvár was conquered by Turks. On 8 September 1563 the St Stephan's royal crown was put on the head of Maximilian II, the son of Emperor Ferdinand I of Habsburg. In toto, the coronations of 11 kings and queens plus 9 of their consorts took place here between 1563 and 1830 including that of Maria Theresa of Austria.

Crown of St. Stephen

The tower is topped by the huge gold plated representation of the Crown of St. Stephen. It was placed in 1847 following the recovery of the damaged tower to remind the cathedral's glory and importance as a coronation-church. It weights 300 kg, being over 1 m of diameter. It lays on a 2 x 2 m gold plated pillow. The total of 8 kg of gold was needed.

Catacombs and Sepulchers

Since the cathedral was built over an old cemetery, there are large catacombs up to 6 m below the St. Anna Chapel containing the sepulchers of many significant figures, such as ecclesiastic dignitaries, members of the Pálffi dynasty, presidents of the historic Bratislava county as well as J. I. Bajza (the author of the first Slovak novel). The last burial took place in 1895.

Current state

Today, the church is slowly falling apart, being much endangered by the vibrations caused by the heavy traffic of the nearby bridge (Nový most). However the restoration efforts started back in 1997.

Vary

 


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