A wheel chandelier is a lighting installment, in the form of a chandelier hanging from the ceiling in the form of a spoked wheel. The oldest and most important examples derive from the Romanesque period.
Wheel chandeliers were made for the practical purpose of lighting the greatchurches and other public areas, but in religion they also had symbolic significance, depicting the Garden of Eden or the Kingdom of God. The wheel, its gates, and its towers, which are usually decorated with Prophets and Apostles or inscribed with their names, symbolise the city walls of the New Jerusalem. The buttresses, towers, and candles number twelve or a multiple of twelve, after the numerology of the Book of Revelation. This symbolism is first found on two wheel chandeliers of Hildesheim Cathedral.[1] The great wheel chandelier of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre was an inspiration.[2]
Romanesque wheel chandeliers
In Germany there are four great Romanesque wheel chandeliers. The fact that they are made from fire-gilt copper and not from pure gold has saved them from being melted down. They were decorated with Prophets and angels in silver and with precious gemstones, but for the most part these have been lost.
Hartwig's chandelier in Comburg, Schwäbisch Hall, with a 5-metre diameter, from the 12th century (also called Himmlische Jerusalem(Heavenly Jerusalem) with saints and soldiers in the towers.
The wheel chandeliers of the Gothic period in Germany are smaller in size than the Romanesque ones, and they are no longer representations of Jerusalem.[3] The chandelier made of brass in Münster Cathedral has a circular pierced rim decorated with a few statuettes on its side, and ornamented with tracery-work like filigree and pinnacles.[3] In the Minster Church of St. Alexander in Einbeck there is a later gothic wheel chandelier of painted brass with a diameter of c. 3.5 metres. The inscription on its bracket dates it to 1420. It was presumably gifted by Degenhard Ree, a canon of the collegiate church. The composition ought to go back to a lost example in Pöhlde Cloister.[4]
Another type is the wagon wheel chandelier. As its name suggests, it is usually made from old wagon wheels. As opposite to most of the wheel chandeliers, wagon wheel chandeliers were usually created as a cheap way to lighten the common spaces of large houses, businesses and public halls. Most of them were made from wood reinforced with steel.
Sedlmayr, Hans (1993). Die Entstehung der Kathedrale (in German). Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder. pp. 125–130. ISBN978-3-451-04181-5.
Clemens Bayer: Die beiden großen Inschriften des Barbarossa-Leuchters. In: Celica Jherusalem. Festschrift für Erich Stephany. Hrsg. Clemens Bayer. Köln 1986. S. 213–240
Bernhard Gallistl: Bedeutung und Gebrauch der großen Lichterkrone im Hildesheimer Dom. In: Concilium Medii Aevi 12 (2009) S. 43–88 (PDF; 2,9 MB)
Rolf Dieter Blumer, Ines Frontzek: Recherchiert und kartiert. Der Comburger Hertwig-Leuchter. In: Denkmalpflege in Baden-Württemberg, 41. Jahrgang 2012, Heft 4, S. 194–199 (PDF)
"Kloster Groß-Comburg". Zentrale für Unterrichtsmedien im Internet e.V. (in German). Retrieved 22 February 2024.