Walls of Basel explained

The Basel city walls are a complex of walls surrounding the central part of the Swiss city of Basel, only partially preserved today. The first city wall was completed around 1080 under bishop Burkhard von Fenis. A newer wall was constructed around 1230, which is known as the Inner Wall. Its course was mostly identical to the Burkhard wall. In 1362 the construction of a larger wall complex began due to the city's expansion; it was completed in 1398, and is known as the Outer Wall. In 1859 the city's executives decided to raze the inner wall and gates to the ground. Three outer city gates and a short piece of the wall were saved from demolition and are being preserved as part of the city's heritage.

History

At the end of the 11th century, the growing settlement in the valley was walled, though settlement continued outside the wall.[1] As the town spread up the west slopes surrounding the Birsig river, that section was walled also. At the beginning of the 13th century, all these sections were included within a single wall that embraced both the valley and hill settlements. In 1362, the city began building a new, wider city wall, which also enclosed the suburbs. It is possible that the destruction wrought by the earthquake of 1356 contributed to the decision to build a new wall. Among the construction materials were debris from the destruction and Jewish gravestones from the cemetery of the first Jewish community of Basel,[2] which was destroyed in the violence surrounding the outbreak of the Black Death in 1348. The construction of the outer city walls was completed in 1398 and these walls lasted until the mid-nineteenth century.

In 1859, the city walls were demolished in order to increase space and improve hygiene conditions in the city. The debris from the demolished walls were used to fill in the city moat, and these areas were converted into new streets and spaces, many of which bear names referring to the original wall. During this process, most of the embedded gravestones were lost. Ten of the few remaining ones are on display in the courtyard of the Jewish Museum of Switzerland.[3]

City gates

Outer gates

Three gates from the outer wall have been preserved, and today they represent landmarks of Basel and a heritage site of national significance:[4]

Inner gates

The inner walls used to encircle the Great Basel (Gross Basel) on the west bank and Small Basel (Kleinbasel) on the east bank of the Rhine. All the inner gates and walls were demolished between 1860 and 1870:

East bank

In August 1839, Rudolf Forcart-Hoffmann, a manufacturer of passementerie, petitioned the ('Lesser Council') of Basel that Aeschenschwibbogen should be demolished. He wanted to build a new house,, at the location. This would serve a double purpose: beautifying the city, and removing a bottleneck on an important traffic route. Permission was granted, and Aeschenschwibbogen was demolished in 1841.[5] [6] [7] [8]

West bank

Other wall buildings

See also

Notes and References

  1. Dickinson, Robert. The West European City: A Geographical Interpretation, Volume 12, pp.66-67 (Taylor & Francis 1998).
  2. Book: Tonjola, Johannes. Basilea Sepulta. 1661. Basel. 1.
  3. Book: Battegay, Lubrich, Caspar, Naomi. Jewish Switzerland: 50 Objects Tell Their Stories. Jewish Museum of Switzerland / Christoph Merian Verlag. 2018. 978-3-85616-847-6.
  4. [Swiss inventory of cultural property of national and regional significance]
  5. Web site: Aeschenschwibbogen . basler-bauten.ch . German . 17 June 2018.
  6. C. A. . Müller . 134 . . Die Stadtbefestigung von Basel . 1956 . 12–14 . German.
  7. Book: Suter, Rudolf . Von der alten zur neuen Aeschenvorstadt . . 1991 . 3-907946-40-5 . 6, 22 . German.
  8. Book: Meier, Eugen A. . Basel Einst und Jetzt . 3rd . Buchverlag Basler Zeitung . 1995 . B002YOLWXY . 118–119 . German. (by)