The Blutritt in the Upper
Swabia Weingarten is regarded as the biggest equestrian procession in
Europe. It takes place on the Friday after
Ascension Day, also known as "Blood Friday" ("Blutfreitag"). In 1529 the Blutritt was first mentioned in writing, but even then it was labeled as an old custom. The
Relic of the Holy Blood is kept in the church of the
Weingarten Abbey. Traditionally, the Blutritt is a pilgrimage for men. On the day of the Blutritt, the "Rider of the Holy Blood" (German: Heilig-Blut-Reiter) carries the relic through Weingarten and the surrounding areas. Every year about 2,000 to 3,000 horsemen dressed in tailcoats and top hats (in 2016 there were 2,366 horsemen), grouped in over 100 groups of Blood Riders, escort the Rider of the Holy Blood on horseback. About 80
chapels accompany the horsemen. Every year the Blutritt in Weingarten is witnessed from the side of the road by over 30,000 pilgrims and spectators. A "small blood Friday" is also held on the first Sunday of July, the tradition
Feast of the Most Precious Blood. Despite the fact that after liturgical reforms the feast is no longer on the official calendar, many pilgrimage sites retain the customary celebration. Delegates from various rider groups gather (with their banners but without horses) for a church service followed by a social gathering.
Origin According to legend, the
Relic of the Holy Blood in Weingarten contains the blood of
Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified in 30 or 31 AD on the hill
Golgotha. A Roman legionnaire, later known as
Longinus, pushed his lance deep into the side of the crucified to make sure he was dead. The blood of Jesus Christ dripped on the face of the legionnaire and enlightened him; this was, according to the legend, the origin of the miraculous healing force of the blood of Jesus. Longinus collected some drops of the blood, mixed them with the soil of Golgotha and stored them in a lead box. After being baptized by the Apostles, he left Jerusalem and traveled on a ship to the Italian
Mantua where he preached Christianity and was consequently prosecuted. In hardship and distress, he hid the casket and died as a
Martyr later on. One day the place of hiding was revealed to the blind Adilbero, and the news of which reached the Emperor. The Emperor, the Pope, and the Duke of Mantua let Adilbero show them the relic's hiding place and he got his eyesight back. However, a bloody conflict broke out about the relic. As a consequence, the object of dispute was apportioned: one piece for
Pope Leo IX, one for the Duke of Mantua, and a third for Emperor
Henry III. An alternate account states that the early Christian prosecution of
Longinus came to an end in
Cappadocia. The relic and his mortal remains were sent as a counter-present from
Constantinople to the city of Mantua. When Mantua was under siege by the
Lombards for one year in 580, the relic was hidden in a secret place and found again in 804. Thereupon,
Pope Leo III (795-816) and
Charlemagne (768-814) had it examined. The relic was disassembled. While Mantua was under siege by the Hungarians in 923, the parts were hidden again; the greater part, together with the relics of
Longinus, in the garden of the Andreas Hospital, and the smaller part in the old church of St.
Paul, close to the cathedral (found in 1479). On 12 March 1048 the greater part of the Relic of the Holy Blood and the remains of Longinus were found in Mantua.
Pope Leo IX (1049–1054) called a synod of the church in 1053 in Mantua and wanted to take the relic of the precious blood to Rome. Due to the opposition of the people of Mantua, a second division of the relic occurred; one piece remained in Mantua, whereas the other was taken to Rome. In 1055 Emperor
Henry III (1039–1056) traveled to Mantua and got another part of the Relic of the Holy Blood. When
Emperor Henry III died in 1056, the relic was bequeathed to
Baldwin V, Count of Flanders, (1035–1067) as a sign of reconciliation. He gave it as a present to his relation
Judith of Flanders (1032–1094) who was married with her second husband
Welf I, Duke of Bavaria. In 1094, Judith gave the Relic of the Blood to Walicho (1088–1108), abbot of
Weingarten Abbey. Apparently, it was the Friday after
Ascension Day and is, thus, the origin of Blood Friday and the Ride of the Holy Blood. The handing over is depicted as a relief on the Hosanna-bell at the Basilica St. Martin.
History of Blutritt Until the 17th century the Blutritt was connected with a border bypassing of the area of Weingarten. Therefore, the fathers marched with their sons who had just come of age and gave them a
slapping in the face as a memory backing at prominent sites.
Procedure Since 1890, as a prelude to
Blutritt, after the evening Mass on Ascension Thursday, thousands of pilgrims take part in a light procession from the Basilica of St.Martin to the Kreuzberg. The actual
Blutritt starts on Blood Friday at about 7 o'clock in the morning and leads through the streets and adjacent fields of Weingarten for about ten kilometres. The relic, which is set in a cross studded with gemstones, is carried by the Rider of the Holy Blood, who bestows the Blessing of the Holy Blood (German: Segen des Heiligen Blutes) on houses, farms, and fields. The relic is secured by means of a chain with three rings, in case of the horse rearing up and throwing the rider off. Until the abbey was closed in 2010, a religious priest from the Weingarten Abbey was Rider of the Holy Blood. Since 2011, however, the parson of the basilica occupies this position. After about four hours, the reliquary is returned to the basilica.
Altars The equestrian procession travels to four exterior altars. One of them lies outside of the district of
Weingarten, in the municipality of
Baienfurt: • 1st Altar – Thumbstraße 48 in the parish of St. Maria, Weingarten • 2nd Altar – Galgenkreuz (lit. "gallows cross", small religious monument that resembles a
wayside cross or
wayside shrine; similar in meaning to a
conciliation cross, though more specifically relating to an execution site) at the street to Ettishofen in the parish of Heilig Geist, Weingarten • 3rd Altar – farm at the street after
Mochenwangen in the parish of Baienfurt • 4th Altar – Baienfurter Straße at the missionary cross in the parish of St. Martin, Weingarten
Movie: Die Blutritter In 2003, film director made a documentary about several participants of the Blutritt in Weingarten. It is called "Die Blutritter" ("The Riders of the Holy Blood") and premiered at the
Locarno Festival in the summer of 2004. == Blutritt in Bad Wurzach ==