The 1000-year Old Dog Rose at St. Mary's Cathedral, Hildesheim

Saint Mary's Cathedral of Hildesheim, Germany is no ordinary church. It has been on the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage list since 1985 and houses some of the most beautiful and ancient Roman bronze works I have ever seen--namely a fantastic  door decorated with three-dimensional depictions of the life of Jesus (image below). The original church itself dates back to 815 and its lovely inner garden houses the Gothic chapel Annenkapelle, built in 1321. But what makes the garden most appealing and fantastic is the ancient 1000-year old dog rose (Rosa canina) it houses.

Some have doubts that the rose is as old as they say, but if dutiful guardians have regularly taken cuttings from the original rose over the course of 1000-years, it is feasible. Either way, it's huge, well-tended and beautiful year round. My photo shows it in full hip just a few days after Christmas.


The 1000-year old dog rose of
Saint Mary's Cathedral, Hildesheim is well-protected and beautifully pruned and trained.


Small graves in the courtyard garden are decorated with modest stones accented with simple mounds of trimmed shrubs and evergreen groundcovers.


Cobbled roads lead to the main church of Saint Mary's Cathedral.


Seeing the intricately decorated ancient Roman bronze door at the cathedral is worth the visit alone. The door was commissioned by the Saxon Bishop Bernward in 1015.


A holiday appropriate detail of the door.


A verdigris tower is the high point of Saint Mary's Cathedral, Hildesheim.

 

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