St. Jakob (James) is one of the oldest churches in Bamberg and is located just a few meters above Domberg on Jakobsberg, one of Bamberg's seven hills.
Jakobskirche dates from the High Middle Ages, is only a little younger than the Bamberg Cathedral and today gives an impression of how the cathedral may originally have looked inside. It is a flat-roofed, double-choir, cross-shaped pillar basilica, which, based on the model of the cathedral, has the transept in the west.
Jakobskirche was begun in 1073 and completed in 1109. The western of the two choirs was Gothic renewed in the 15th century, the eastern apse was masked by a baroque façade in 1771. At the same time, the southern half-finished tower was demolished and the northern one was crowned with an onion helmet. A coat of arms from the 13th century is the oldest example of the coat of arms carried by the Bamberg "city knight."
The crypt under the west choir was filled in during the first restoration in 1706. The crypt of the east choir disappeared during the second restoration in 1771. The fresco above the crossing with scenes from the life of St. Jakob dates from that time. From 1866 to 1882 the church was re-Romanized. After a careful restoration in the 1990s, it is now the only almost completely Romanesque church in the city. read more