When the
Protestant Reformation swept through
Northern Germany, Bremen's first Protestant prayer took place in one of the chapels of St. Ansgar's Church, Bremen on 9 November 1522. Since that year Bremen was a prevailingly Protestant city.
St Peter's Cathedral then belonged to the
cathedral immunity district (; cf. also
Liberty), an extraterritorial
enclave of the neighbouring
Prince-Archbishopric of Bremen. The then still Catholic
cathedral chapter closed St Peter's in 1532, after a mob of Bremen's
burghers forcefully interrupted the
Catholic mass and prompted Jacob Probst, the pastor of the nearby
Our Lady Church, to preach a
Lutheran sermon. The
Roman Catholic Church was condemned as a symbol of the abuses of a long Catholic past by most local burghers. In 1547 the chapter, meanwhile prevailingly Lutheran, appointed the Dutch
Albert Hardenberg, called Rizaeus, as the first Cathedral preacher of
Protestant affiliation. Rizaeus turned out to be a partisan of the rather
Zwinglian understanding of the
Lord's Supper, which was rejected by the then Lutheran majority of burghers, city council, and chapter. So in 1561, after tremendous quarrels, Rizaeus was dismissed and banned from the city and the cathedral shut again its doors. However, as a consequence of that controversy the majority of Bremen's burghers and city council adopted
Calvinism until the 1590s, while the chapter, being simultaneously the body of secular government in the neighbouring Prince-Archbishopric, clung to
Lutheranism. This antagonism between a Calvinistic majority and a Lutheran minority, though of a powerful position in its immunity district (belonging since 1648 to
Bremen-Verden and annexed to the
Free Hanseatic City of Bremen in 1803), remained determinant until in 1873 the Calvinist and Lutheran congregations in Bremen reconciled and founded a
united administrative umbrella, the still existing Bremian Evangelical Church, comprising the bulk of Bremen's burghers. In 1922 the Bremian church counted about 260,000 parishioners. ==Books==