An early testimony to the veneration of the cross in Coesfeld is a letter of indulgence dated 1 July 1312, in which participants in the cross festival were to be granted a special
indulgence. As a result, the pilgrimage experienced a significant increase in popularity, and donations and offerings for the holy cross grew. In 1359, a fund paying an annual sum of two shillings was established in order to finance the
votive candles burnt in honour of the Coesfeld Cross, and, from 1425, a
Confraternity of the Holy Cross is recorded. Even in the religious turmoil of the 16th century
reform-minded pastors were unable to prevent ordinary folk from continuing to venerate the cross. The initial decline in its ritual worship began with the attacks of Spanish and Dutch mercenaries on the western
Münsterland during the time of the
Eighty Years' War and consequent plundering and impoverishment of the population. A low point was the siege of Coesfeld by (Protestant)
Hessians in 1633 which brought the cult of the cross and pilgrimages to a halt. On 25 February 1634, Hessian (
Calvinist) soldiers took possession of the Coesfeld Cross and "made fun of it in order to please their officers". Only a year later, it was returned into the hands of the townsfolk of the Coesfeld who thenceforth hid the cross in the attic of a house on the market square. Hessians continued to occupy the town until four years after the end of the
Thirty Years' War when, in 1652, Prince-Bishop
Christoph Bernhard von Galen secured their withdrawal for a large sum of money. The prince-bishop promoted the pilgrimage financially and morally, by personally participating in the cross festivals and initiating a great, annual, celebratory thanksgiving procession, called
Hessenutjacht, that made its way around the ramparts of the town of Coesfeld at
Pentecost. He also donated a new altar of the Holy Cross in the Church of Saint Lambert and had the so-called "Great Way of the Cross" (
Großer Kreuzweg) laid out. After the death of Galen, veneration of the cross declined again, fires left the townsfolk impoverished, so that it is unlikely that any more processions were held during this period and, although on 23 June 1727 Pope Benedict XIII granted all the worshippers of the Coesfeld Cross a plenary indulgence, it was little visited as a pilgrimage destination. It took the cross anniversary in 1756 before its popularity resurged. Subsequent anniversaries in 1806, 1850 (!) and especially in 1902, following the political oppression of the Roman Catholic Church during the
Kulturkampf, saw the number of outside pilgrims rise sharply again. Even the
Nazis could not initially suppress participation in the cross festivals and processions until 12 May 1940 when all processions were prohibited for "air defence reasons". The first cross celebrations after the war took place at Pentecost 1945, but due to the destruction of Coesfeld in March 1945, there was no festival; this did not take place again until 1946. Its next anniversary in 1950 was celebrated again without interference, but since then the Coesfeld Cross has not been the destination of outside processions. Since 1982, the Coesfeld Cross has remained for conservation reasons in St. Lambert's Church and a replica was made for the procession. The last cross anniversary took place in 2000 in the light of changed social relations as well as ecumenical progress. == Gallery ==