Spreuer Bridge Explained

Spreuerbrücke
Native Name Lang:de
Coordinates:47.052°N 8.3018°W
Carries:Pedestrian
Starts:Mühlenplatz, Altstadt
Ends:Pfistergasse
Crosses:Reuss
Locale:Lucerne, Switzerland
Other Name:Mühlenbrücke
Named For:Named after chaff (Spreu) dumped from the bridge
Owner:City of Lucerne
Heritage:Cultural Property of National Significance
Id Type:A
Preceded:Reussbrücke
Followed:Geissmattbrücke
Design:Covered wooden bridge
Material:Wood
Material1:Wood
Material2:Stone
Length:81m (266feet)
Traversable:Yes
Mainspan:11.4m (37.4feet), 29.9m (98.1feet), 16.3m (53.5feet), 25.8m (84.6feet)
Number Spans:5
Piers In Water:4
Built:c. 1408
Opening:-->
Destroyed:1566 (partly by tempest), 1871/1875 (mills burnt down)
Rebuilt:after 1566
Replaces:Mühlensteg
Traffic:8400 (2017)

The Spreuer Bridge (German: '''Spreuerbrücke''', formerly also Mühlenbrücke) is one of two extant covered wooden footbridges in the city of Lucerne, Switzerland. Besides the other preserved bridge, the Kapellbrücke, a third bridge of this type – the Hofbrücke – existed in Lucerne, but was demolished in the 19th century.

History

The first bridge was constructed in the 13th century to connect the Mühlenplatz (Mill Place) on the right bank of the Reuss with the mills in the middle of the river. The extension of the bridge to the left bank was completed only in c. 1408. This was the only bridge in Lucerne where it was allowed to dump chaff (in German: Spreu, therefore the name Spreuerbrücke) and leaves into the river, as it was the bridge farthest downriver. The bridge was destroyed by a flood in 1566 and then rebuilt, together with a granary as the bridge head, called the Herrenkeller.

Totentanz

The pediments of the Spreuer Bridge contain paintings in the interior triangular frames, which is a feature unique to the wooden bridges of Lucerne. In the case of the Spreuer Bridge, the paintings form a Danse Macabre, known as Totentanz in German, which was created from 1616 to 1637 under the direction of painter Kaspar Meglinger. It is the largest known example of a Totentanz cycle. Of the 67 original paintings, 45 are still in existence. Most of the paintings contain the coat of arms of the donor in the lower left corner and to the right the coat of arms of the donor's wife. The black wooden frames bear explanations in verse and the names of the donors. The paintings also contain portraits of the donors and other exponents of Lucerne society. The painters of Lucerne knew the woodcuts by Hans Holbein the Younger but were more advanced in their painting technique. The images and texts of the Lucerne Danse Macabre are intended to highlight that there's no place in the city, in the country or at sea where death isn't present.[1]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Hans Georg Wehrens: Der Totentanz im alemannischen Sprachraum. "Muos ich doch dran – und weis nit wan". Schnell & Steiner, Regensburg 2012. . p. 191ff.