A late
Romanesque church was added next to the town's first ring of walls in the 12th century. This new church served as a second city parish following the older,
Alter Peter church. The late
Gothic cathedral visible today, which replaced the Romanesque church, was commissioned by
Duke Sigismund and the people of Munich, and built in the 15th century. The cathedral was erected in only 20 years' time by
Jörg von Halsbach. Because there was not a nearby stone quarry and for other financial reasons, brick was chosen as building material. Construction began in 1468, and when the cash resources were exhausted in 1479,
Pope Sixtus IV granted an
indulgence.'s photograph of the Frauenkirche, March 1837 The two towers, which are both just over 98 meters (323 feet) tall, were completed in 1488, and the church was consecrated in 1494. There were plans for tall, open-work spires typical of the Gothic style, but given the financial difficulties of the time, the plans could not be realized. The towers remained unfinished until 1525. German historian
Hartmann Schedel printed a view of Munich including the unfinished towers in his famous
Nuremberg Chronicle, also known as Schedel's World Chronicle. Finally, because rainwater was regularly penetrating the temporary roofing in the tower's ceilings, the towers were completed in 1525, albeit using a more budget-friendly design. This new design may have been modelled after the
Dome of the Rock in
Jerusalem, which itself was modelled from late
Byzantine architecture and erroneously considered to be
Solomon's original temple. The resulting domes atop each tower contributed to making the church a distinctive Munich landmark. The building has a volume of about 200,000 m³, The cathedral suffered severe damage during the later stages of
World War II. After
Allied forces' air raids, the church roof collapsed, one of the towers suffered severe damage, and the majority of the church's irreplaceable historical artifacts held inside were lost—either destroyed by bomb raids themselves, or removed with the debris in the aftermath. A multi-stage restoration effort began soon after the war. The final stage of restoration was completed in 1994. ==Architecture==