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Keywords

pilgrim
Bâle-Campagne
Basel-Landschaft
Église fortifiée
St. Arbogast
Muttenz
Coquille Saint-Jacques
idolatry
Basel earthquake
St. Jaques
frescoe
Reformation
Wehrkirche
fortified church
Suisse
Schweiz
Switzerland
Bildersturm


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Muttenz - St. Arbogast

Muttenz - St. Arbogast
St. Arbogast is the only church in Switzerland that is surrounded by a defensive wall. A church has existed here already in the 5th century. Mid 12th century the erection of a Romanesque church started, but it got never completed, due to the Basel earthquake of 18 October 1356, the most significant earthquake, historically documented in Central Europe.

Rebuilding started in 1359, from around the fortification of the church started and the wall around the church got built. It is 7 metres high!

The interior walls of the church once were covered with frescoes, dating back to 1450/1500. They were hidden under plaster but since the 1970s are renovated and can be seen again. Some of the frescoes are attributed to Martin Schongauer.

When the frescoes were created, Martin Luther had not written down the the "Ninety-Five Theses", that started the Reformation in 1517, so it is now wonder to see Saint James (St. Jaques) here as a pilgrim.

Things changed dramatically very soon, as the Swiss Reformators (Zwingli, Calvin, Oekolampad..) had a way more radical approach, than their Lutherian collegues in Germany.

In February 1529 a group of about 200 people forced their way into the (at that time still catholic) Muenster in Basel (only about 6kms apart from Muttenz,) and destroyed all reachable crucifixes, statues and altars, just everything what was connected to "idolatry" in their thinking. The same afternoon the iconoclasm extended to many other churches in Basel as well.

Erasmus of Rotterdam was an eyewittness of the iconoclasm and wrote about it.

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