St. Pierre Cathedral


Saint Peter's Cathedral Geneva is a historic church in Geneva, Switzerland. Since 1535 it has been the principal church of the Protestant Church of Geneva and a central site of the Protestant Reformation. It is closely associated with John Calvin, who preached there during his leadership of the Reformed movement.

History

Below the cathedral is an accessible archaeological site that includes a 1st-century BC tomb of an ancient Allobrogian chieftain. An oppidum erected on the hill of Saint-Pierre allowed them to control the inland navigation on the Rhône.
In the 4th century AD, Geneva became the seat of a bishopric. The first Christian edifice was built on the hill, on the ruins of the Roman sanctuary. This “northern cathedral” and a first baptistry were soon complemented by a southern cathedral, a second baptistry and an atrium.
After a fire struck the north cathedral in the year 500, King Sigismund of Burgundy rebuilt it and asked Pope Symmachus to bring him the relics of St Peter. The present building was begun under Arducius de Faucigny, the prince-bishop of the Diocese of Geneva, around 1160, in Gothic style. The interior of the cathedral is lined with fourth-century mosaics. The German painter Konrad Witz painted an altarpiece, the so-called St. Peter Altarpiece, for the cathedral in 1444, now in the Musée d'Art et d'Histoire, Geneva, which contains his composition, the Miraculous Draft of Fishes (Witz)|Miraculous Draft of Fishes]. The work is considered a key moment in European painting because Witz based the scene on a real view of Lake Geneva, making it the earliest known topographically accurate landscape in Western art.
At the time of the Reformation, the interior of the large, cruciform, late-gothic church was stripped of its rood screen, side chapels, and all decorative works of art, except the stained glass, leaving a vast, plain interior that contrasts sharply with the interior of surviving medieval churches that remain Roman Catholic. A Neo-Classical main façade was added in the 18th century. In the 1890s, Genevans redecorated a large, side chapel adjacent to the cathedral's main doors in a polychrome, Gothic Revival style.
Theodore Beza, French Calvinist Protestant theologian, reformer and scholar, and successor to John Calvin, was buried at St. Pierre in 1605.

Present day

On Whit Saturday, 30 May 2020, after nearly 485 years a Catholic Mass was to be celebrated in the cathedral as a symbol of ecumenical hospitality. Because of COVID-19, the Catholic Mass was postponed and was celebrated on Saturday, 5 March 2022.
On certain nights of the full moon, the cathedral sponsors "The Nocturnes de St-Pierre", an opportunity to access the towers for a panoramic view of the surrounding countryside by moonlight.

Music

Organs

Saint Peter’s Cathedral in Geneva contains three pipe organs: the Metzler grand organ in the west gallery, a chancel organ built by Xavier Silbermann, and a chapel organ built by E.F. Walcker. The instruments span different eras and serve varied musical roles within the cathedral.
There has been an organ at the cathedral since at least the 16th century.
The present Metzler grand organ is the fourth major instrument to serve in Saint Peter’s Cathedral, following earlier gallery organs by Scherrer (1757), Merklin (1866), and the Geneva builder Tschanun.
The Metzler organ was built in 1965 by Metzler & Söhne, replacing the deteriorated Tschanun instrument. The organ's large case was designed by Poul-Gerhard Andersen of Copenhagen. The Metzler instrument has four manuals and pedal, with a total of 67 stops.It features traditional mechanical key action and electric stop action. Its tonal design follows the late 17th-century North German organ tradition, complemented by a few French-inspired and Romantic stops. Metzler incorporated several ranks from the previous Merklin and Tschanun organs into the new instrument, thereby preserving some of the cathedral’s historic pipework.The four divisions of the organ are arranged in a free-standing case that was carefully designed not to disrupt the architecture of the nave. Installation was delayed by structural improvements to the gallery, but the instrument was completed and inaugurated in November 1965. A comprehensive overhaul took place in 2003, during which the organ was dismantled, cleaned and regulated.
The chancel organ was constructed in 1972 by Xavier Silbermann of Thonon.
Funded largely by the Cathedral Concerts Foundation, it provides a smaller liturgical instrument for use in the crossing and transepts. It has a single manual with divided stops and a mandatory pedal coupler, and is mounted on a movable platform. The organ was first used in October 1972 and formally inaugurated in January 1973.
The chapel organ is located in the Chapel of the Maccabees and is the oldest of the three instruments. It was built by the German firm Walcker and installed in 1888.
The organ was a gift to the cathedral during a period of major restoration of the chapel’s interior. Apart from the later addition of an electric blower, the organ has survived essentially in its original 19th-century state.
Housed in a tall neo-Gothic case designed to harmonise with the chapel interior, it has two manuals, mechanical action and cone-valve chests.
The instrument is regarded as the oldest surviving mechanical-action organ in Geneva.
A full restoration was carried out in 2021, retaining its original stoplist.

Bells

The cathedral’s bells are divided between the north tower, the south tower and the central spire. The most prominent is La Clémence, cast in 1407 and named in reference to Antipope Clement VII, Robert of Geneva, whose influence extended to Geneva during the Western Schism through his legate, Cardinal Jean de Brogny. The bell retained its position in the life of the city through successive recastings. The present bourdon, made in 1902 by the foundry Rüetschi and weighing more than six tonnes, occupies the same role.
The north tower also contains La Bellerive of 1473.
The south tower carries a group whose earliest forms were produced in the late medieval and early modern period, later recast to maintain their established functions in the tower peal. These are L'Accord, La Collavine, L'Éveil, Le Rappel and L'Espérance. Together they form the liturgical peal used on Saturday evenings and Sunday mornings.
The hour bell of 1460, now located in the spire, was lowered in pitch in 1898 so that it matched the other tower bells. It strikes the hours and is also connected to the carillon system.
The spire contains the cathedral’s carillon. A first mechanism was installed in 1749, the present instrument was constructed in 1931 and enlarged in 2011. After the 2011 expansion, the carillon consists of thirty-seven fixed bells arranged over three octaves, including the 1460 hour bell. The carillon functions in two modes. An automatic mechanism governed by the cathedral clock plays short sequences at the quarter-hours and, on the hour, performs one of twelve melodies assigned to the months of the year.
No.
Name
Year
Caster
Diameter
Mass
Strike tone Tower
1La Clémence1902H. Rüetschi, Aarau21906238g0North
2L'Accord1845S. Treboux, Vevey15602080c1South
3La Bellerive1473Nicolas Guerci14001500e1North
4La Collavine160911401012g1South
5L'Espérance2002H. Rüetschi, Aarau930475a1South
6L'Eveil1845S. Treboux, Vevey750261c2South
7Le Rappel15th century590133e2South
La Cloche des Heures146012901610e1Spire
Le Tocsin1509760270cis2South