You're probably curious: the bones were removed some 50 years later so no, there is nothing left of the rebellion leaders inside.
Historical Artifacts
Just a community for everyone to share artifacts, reconstructions, or replicas for the historically-inclined to admire!
Generally, an artifact should be 100+ years old, but this is a flexible requirement if you find something rare and suitably linked to an era of history, not a strict rule. Anything over 100 is fair game regardless of rarity.
Generally speaking, ruins should go to [email protected]
Illustrations of the past should go to [email protected]
Photos of the past should go to [email protected]
I remembered seeing cages, like these, hanging from the Cologne cathedral, maybe 20 years ago. But I can't seem to find any reference on it.
Does anyone know if I'm (mis)remembering?
At Colongne cathedral it is/was a scaffold for construction works that was attached to the towers and was moved along the proceding of the restauration.
Attached to the Lamberti church Münster are three human sized cages which displayed the remains of the executed leaders of the Anabaptists after the 16th century uprising.
Wow, the engineering on that scaffolding must've been pretty interesting.
Essentially cantilivered loads but balanced by the opposing side.
I'd love to see a 3D graphic of it from an oblique angle - like a CAD wireframe.
The building likely has put holes for scaffolding, most older stone buildings do for pointing and service.
Thank you. Hope I'm not misremembering to the point that I mistook scaffolding for human sized cages.
It looks quite tiny in relation to the entire cathedral and, afaIk, was sometimes smaller than in the photo.
Dan Carlin has a great Hardcore History episode about this, Prophets of Doom
remember when public executions was the entertainment for the week?