Despite the heavy damage to the cathedral in the Second World War, it still contains numerous side altars, epitaphs and statues of saints. These derive from the Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque periods. Within and around the cathedral are also numerous furnishings and artworks from the post-war period, especially from the 1990s. The numbers in brackets in the following section refer to the following plan, which indicates the locations of the most significant items.
Westwerk Baroque high altar On the west wall of the Old Choir is the Baroque high altar (1.), which was made by
Adrian van den Boegart und
Gerhard Gröninger. The high altar was donated by Gröninger on behalf of the cathedral chapter in 1619. The new high altar was intended to be able to hold, protect and display all the relics of the cathedral. Gröninger supplied further altar designs, in which the central part of the altar (
retabel) was conceived as a stone reliquary. He discussed the form of the altar wings, also in 1619, with the important painter
Peter Paul Rubens. But the order for the six panel paintings of the altar wings was filled in the end by Adrian van den Boegart of Amsterdam. The high altar, with its painted and carved wings was located in the high choir of the cathedral from its creation until the beginning of the twentieth century and permanently displayed various relics. In the course of the restoration of the altar space and high choir after the Second World War, the high altar was transferred to the westwerk. The relics which were originally housed in the high altar, are now on display in the cathedral treasury. The fourteenth-century statues of the Apostles, which were also displayed on the high altar, are now in lighted niches of the celebration altar at the centre of the altar island. The central part of the high altar is only decorated with the items from the cathedral treasury for which it was originally made on special occasions – most recently the cathedral
jubilee in 2014.
Folding doors The high altar depicts central scenes and events in the life of
St Paul. When closed (especially during
Advent and fasts) the depictions of miracles worked by St Paul on the back sides of the two altar wings are visible. When opened, the left wing shows the healing of
Saint Publius' sick father on
Malta, while the right wing shows the people of
Lystra bringing offerings to Paul and
Barnabas. When the wings are opened, a further pair of wings are visible, which decorate the central marble reliquary shrine. Their exterior was designed by Gröninger himself and shows two scenes in shallow relief: the
Conversion of Paul and his decapitation. The interior shows the same two scenes, but as paintings.
Marble shrine The marble shrine itself in the centre of the high altar is intended to hold the more than 57 expensive vessels, statues, reliquaries and over treasures from the romanesque, gothic and Baroque periods. The central part was not made of
sandstone, but of black and dark red marble, which contrasts strikingly with the gold and silver reliquaries. Gröninger arranged the shrine in four levels; each dedicated to a single important "time" or phase of religious history. The uppermost pedimental level was dedicated to the "time of the prophets" and contained the 14 busts of Biblical patriarchs, kings and prophets which were made between 1380 and 1390. The two middle levels were dedicated to the "wealth of times" or the "Middle time." This was the place for the 14th-century statues of the apostles which have been displayed on the front of the modern high altar in the crossing since 1956, but it also has space for a 13th-century statue of the
Mother of God enthroned and for a reliquary cross from the beginning of the 12th century. The bottom level is devoted to the time of time of Christian love and witness. This has space for various reliquaries of numerous saints, including Paul, as well as saints associated with the diocese.
Baptismal font The baptismal font (3.) in the Old Choir dates from the early 14th century. It shows depictions of the Baptism of Jesus and the
four evangelists.
Plaque for Cardinal Höffner On the northwest crossing pillar of the westwerk hangs a memorial (2.) for Cardinal
Joseph Höffner who was Bishop of Münster (1962–1968). It is a bronze relief (shoulder bust) made by sculptor
Karl Burgeff of Cologne and was installed in the cathedral during the city's 1200th anniversary celebrations. The relief is about 1.46 m high and 60 cm wide. It shows the Cardinal in episcopal costume, i.e. the
cope and
mitre, but without his
crozier. His narrow, ascetic face is striking; his severe eyes look out directly at the viewer from thick glasses. The plaque reads "
Gedenken an Joseph Kardinal Höffner 1906–1987 / Bischof von Münster 1962–1968 / Erzbischof von Köln 1969–1987" (In gratitude for Cardinal Joseph Höffner 1906–1987 / Bishop of Münster 1962–1968 / Archbishop of Cologne 1968–1987) and also has a quote of the bishop on the occasion of his departure: "
Wenn ihr alles getan habt, was euch befohlen wurde, sollt ihr sagen: wir sind unnütze Knechte! Wir haben nur unsere Schuldigkeit getan. Keiner von uns wird zu sagen wagen, dass er alles getan hat. Deshalb bitte ich um Vergebung für alles, was ich als Bischof versäumt habe" (When you have done everything asked of you, you should say: we are useless servants! We have only done our duty. None of us will dare to say that they have done everything. So I beg forgiveness for everything I have not done as bishop). The relief shows the bronze arms of the cardinal as well, with his motto "
justitia et carita" (justice and love).
Triptych There is a large
triptych (4.) "Pietà und Auferstehung" (Piety and Resurrection) in the chapel of the south tower, which was made by artist Thomas Lange. It shows the
descent from the cross in the foreground and the sketched shape of Mary in the background, with the dead Christ resting in her lap. God the Father is visible in the upper part. The triptych was donated by a private individual.
Statue of St Barbara In the entrance area (south-west transept) is a statue of
St Barbara which is not very prominently displayed. She holds a round tower with three windows in her hands. The legend has it that the saint was locked in a tower by her father to keep her from marriage and Christian influence. Because of the cramped nature of the tower and its stairway, she is now patron saint of miners – the cramped tower symbolises the way through the narrow door of death to eternal life.
Images File:Münster St.Paulus Dom Epitaph Bernhard von Westerholt.JPG|Epitaph of Bernhard von Westerholt († 1609) File:MuensterDomEpitaphOttoVonDorgelo.jpg|Epitaph of Otto von Dorgelo (in the transept) File:Paulusdom Muttergottes.jpg|Depiction of Mary File:Münster St.Paulus Dom Figur Paradieseingang.JPG|Statue in the paradise
Nave Christophorus-Statue On the pillar on the northern transition from the west transept to the central aisle of the nave is a monumental statue of
St Christopher (5.). Statues of this saint have been common in entrance ways since the Middle Ages: a quick look at the statue is meant to protect from sudden death. The sculpture dates to 1627. It was made by Johann von Bocholt. The sculpture was only slightly damaged in the Second World War. In the course of the restoration work after the war however, the original paintwork of the statue was destroyed. In its left hand the statue holds a leafless trunk with branches. On his right shoulder is the young Jesus, with his right hand raised in a benediction. The inscription on the base of the statue commemorates provost and Domherr Johann Heidenreich of Vörden zu Darfeld, who commissioned it.
St Catherine Opposite the pulpit is a statue of
St Catherine. She is the patroness of preachers and is invoked to save the "tongue tied."
Von Velen's Epitaph In the south side-aisle (I) is the epitaph of Domsenior Anton Heinrich Hermann von Valen, which was made in his lifetime by the carpenter
Johann Heinrich König and was completed in 1738.
Images DomKanzel.jpg|Pulpit and Laurentius-Altar NRW, Munster - St.Paulus Dom 09.jpg|Von Velen's Epitaph MuensterDomChristopherus.jpg|Christophorus-Statue and Blasius-Altar Münster Paulusdom St. Blasius-Altar.jpg|Blasius-Altar NRW, Munster - St.Paulus Dom 07.jpg|The Epitaph of Jodokus von Droste (left)
East transept Van Büren Epitaph altar In the south arm of the east transept is a painted stone relief (6.) depicting the
Adoration of the Magi: in the centre is the Mother of God with the newborn Jesus in her lap taking a gift from the kneeling king
Melchior. The king is depicted in the guise of Domherr Melchior van Büren, who donated the altar. Behind him stands King
Caspar with a golden goblet prepared as a gift for the baby Jesus. King Balthasar is depicted as an African. He too stands behind the kneeling king Melchior. Joseph and the Apostle
Bartholomew are included in the scene, as are two armed
putti. The monument was created before 1534.
Tomb of von Plettenberg In the north arm of the east transept (the Stephanus-Choir) is the grave monument of Prince-Bishop Friedrich Christian
von Plettenberg (8.). Following his death in May 1706, it was installed between 1707 and 1708 by the sculptor
Johann Mauritz Gröninger. The grave monument consists of a portico structure, flanked by statues of von Plettenberg's
name saints in episcopal costume with mitres and croziers –
St Frederick on the left and Bishop Christian on the right. In the centre of the monument is a sarcophagus with the image of the Prince-Bishop on top of it. The prince's
arms are displayed above the portico structure by putti. Von Plettenberg's titles and honours are inscribed on the front and back of the sarcophagus. The image of the Prince-Bishop on top of the sarcophagus is in a half-sitting, half-lying position with his head looking slightly upwards. At his feet stands an angel with an open book. Originally the words "
Diligite iustitiam, qui iudicatis terram" (Favour justice, you who pass judgement on the world:
Wisdom 1.1.) were inscribed in the book. Behind the cardinal stands a second heavenly servant, holding the insignia of the Prince-Bishop. In the upper part of the marble structure is a large clock. It is surrounded by drapery and a banner with the words "
Consilio et Constantia" ("By Counsel and Constancy"). The clock itself was made by the clockmaker Joachim Münnig and painted by Wolff Heinrich Schmorck. The monument is made of black and white marble. It originally stood in the High Choir, behind the astronomical clock – the two clocks were intended to use the same mechanism. Today it is located on the west wall of the east transept.
Pestkreuz On the east wall of the Stephanus-Choir is a 14th-century processional cross. It is known as the "Pestkreuz" (Plague Cross), because it is believed that the sufferings of plague c. 1350 are reflected in the depiction of the woeful crucified Christ depicted on it. The wooden cross and the statue of Jesus were made together. Jesus' face is wrought with cares and shows the signs of suffering. His half-opened eyes are swollen, his cheeks sunken, his lips slightly open. His emaciated body hangs from the cross. On the back side of the statue there are two niches – one between the shoulder blades, the other larger one near the pelvis. They are now empty, but presumably originally held relics.
St. Liborius In the Johannes-Choir, opposite the astronomical clock, is a lifesize figure of
St Liborius. The saint is depicted in the costume of a bishop. In his left hand he holds a book with three stones, as
patron saint of
kidney stones. In his right hand he holds a gilt wooden crozier. An old tradition is connected to the crozier, according to which, at the death of a
diocesan bishop, Liborius' staff is placed at the dead man's feet. His successor must provide Liborius with a new staff. This tradition began during the
Thirty Years' War (1618–1648). At that time, the Domherrs of
Paderborn sent their reliquaries to Münster, to protect them from robbery and arson. During their time in Münster are meant to have miraculously spared the city from the contemporaneous destruction. For this reason, the Domherr of Münster, Johann Wilhelm von Sintzig donated the state of St Liborius to the cathedral after the signing of the
Peace of Westphalia in 1648. Since then, each bishop is interred with the statue's crozier and his successor has to acquire a new one. This is to be an exact successor of its predecessor, made of
Linden wood, with layers of chalk applied and decorated with
gold leaf and oil paints.
High choir Triumphal Cross The Triumphal Cross (German:
Triumphkreuz, 10.) is a monumental wooden crucifix, which hangs above the main altar in the high choir. It shows Jesus being crucified as continuous redeemer of sins, dressed like the risen Christ in a long, belted tunic shaped into grooved parallel folds. Christ is depicted in hieratic symmetry. Head, body, legs and feet are completely vertical, the arms extend absolutely horizontally. His open palms are nailed to the cross. His feet stand on a
Suppedaneum and are not nailed. Jesus' bearded head appears solemn, with his eyes directed at the viewer. On the collar and chest of his high priestly gown are carvings imitating gemstones. The figure must have originally worn a crown, but this has been lost. This depiction is based on the vision of
John of Patmos in the
Book of Revelation (
similem Filio hominis, vestitum podere, et precinctum ad mamillas zona aurea – "A likeness of the Son of man, dressed in the poderes with a golden belt tied round his breast," ). The crucifix, also known as "
Volto Santo" dates to the late 13th century. Cross and corpus are made of oak. The figure is c. 2.22 m high, his armspan is 1.98 m. The cross itself is 3.55 m high, 2.62 m wide and about 3 cm deep. The Triumphal cross has only hung in the high choir of the cathedral as the altar cross since 1973. Before that it hung in the cloisters and was in poor condition. Parts of the arms of the cross and the ends of the arms had disappeared, and the figure was cracked. In 1973 and 1974, the cross was restored in
Osnabrück, using photographs. In the course of the restoration, the lost ends of the arms were reconstructed. Whether the eight-petalled rosette pattern on the ends existed on the original is uncertain. Originally the crucifix was painted, but only a few traces still remain today. It is mounted on steel rods in its back side, which is undecorated because the work was originally designed as a wall hanging.
Further items • The modern high altar (10.) is located under the crossing. It is made of
sandstone and is shaped as a simple block. A lit vitrine is enclosed in its front side, in which the historic apostle statues from the old gothic high altar are displayed. • In front of the northeastern crossing pillar is a Gothic filagreed
Sakramentshaus (Tabernacle, 11.) • In the centre of the high choir hangs a large
wheel chandelier (13.). • Halfway up the crossing pillars on the altar island are more-than-life-size stone statues of the
Four Evangelists, who face towards all the cardinal directions, proclaiming the
good news. • Further statues of saints stand in the high choir. They symbolise the presence of the saints at the
Eucharist. In addition to statues of the Mother of God,
Joseph and the church's patron Paul (with a sword), there are stone statues of the twelve apostles, holding candlesticks, below the upper level of windows in the high choir. • The bishop's seat, the
cathedra is shaped like a professorial chair, which symbolises the instructional role of the bishop.
Ambulatory Astronomical clock The astronomical clock was built between 1540 and 1542, replacing an earlier astronomical clock of 1408. It has a ten-bell chime which can be operated from the cathedral organ, and automata which move at the quarter hour. The main dial is an
astrolabe, the lower dial is a calendar.
Statue of St Anthony The ambulatory of the cathedral contains a statue of Saint
Anthony of Padua, dressed as a
Franciscan friar, with the baby Jesus in his arms. The saint looks at the child, smiling, and Jesus looks back at him. The sculpture was made by court sculptor
Johann Mauritz Gröninger of Münster. It was originally located in an abbey in Münster and came into the possession of the cathedral only in 1907 as the result of a (private) donation. The statue is dated to around 1675.
Stations of the Cross In the niches of the walls of the choir screen are 15 stations of the cross (14.), which were made by the artist
Bert Gerresheim of Düsseldorf) between 1995 and 1996. They are bronze sculptures in the round. They are special because modern-day individuals and important people from the diocese's history are depicted in the stations, including
Karl Leisner, Sister
Maria Euthymia,
Niels Stensen,
Anna Katharina Emmerick,
Clemens August von Galen,
Pope John Paul II and
Mother Teresa.
Bust of Cardinal von Galen At the back wall of the high choir stands a pedestal with a bronze bust of
Cardinal Clemens August von Galen (15.). It is a reproduction – the original was made in 1950 by sculptor Edwin Scharff for the foyer of the diocese's archives. The Cardinal is depicted with a mitre decorated with an image of the
Good Shepherd. Source material for the bust included, among other things, the cardinal's
death mask. The reproduction was made in 1976 for the 30th anniversary of the Cardinal's death. It initially stood on a stone corbel in the burial chapel. When Pope John Paul II visited in 1987, the burial chapel was remodelled and the bust was moved out of the chapel to a location with a view of the chapel. The bust and tomb are linked by a bronze plate in the floor.
Ivory crucifix In the Maximuskapelle is an
ivory crucifix (18.), on permanent loan from a private owner. The sculpture was produced by
Flemish artist
Francois Duquesnoy (1597–1643).
Tomb of Christoph B. von Galen The tomb of Prince-Bishop
Christoph Bernhard von Galen (19.) is located in the St. Josephskapelle, the furthest east of the chapels built by him on the ambulatory. The monument was made by court sculptor
Johann Mauritz Gröninger. Construction was begun during the life of the Prince-Bishop and was completed in 1679, the year after his death. The monument sits on a massive podium, with a marble statue of the Prince-Bishop kneeling on a cushion, venerating a crucifix which an angel holds in front of him. The Prince-Bishop is shown dressed in a
surplice and a
pluvial, with his crozier propped up behind him and his
mitre on the floor in front of him.
Tomb of Cardinal von Galen The tomb of
Clemens August Graf von Galen (20.) is located in the southeast Galen chapel off the ambulatory, the Ludgeruskapelle. It consists of a grave plate made by
South Tyrol sculptor
Siegfried Moroder. It bears the following inscription:
Further items File:Münster, St. Paulus-Dom, Joseph.jpg|Josephskapelle: Statue of St. Joseph, originally a pedimental sculpture on one of the farm buildings of
Marienfeld Abbey File:MuensterDomMaximusKapelle.jpg|Maximuskapelle: Ivory crucifix File:MuensterDomSebastiansaltar.jpg|Maximuskapelle: Sebastian's altar
Cloisters Der Bettler In the cathedral cloisters is a bronze sculpture called "Der Bettler" ("The Beggar", 23.). The sculpture is an over-life-size depiction of an emaciated man on crutches, looking up towards heaven. The original sculpture was made by
Ernst Barlach in 1930 in connection with plans for a sculptural cycle for the facade of the
St. Catherine's Church in
Lübeck, inspired by the concept of "Community of the Saints"; it was not meant to be a traditional depiction of a saint, but a depiction of human fundamentals. The sculpture in the cathedral is one of eight copies produced in 1979–1980. The roughly 2.17 m high figure was originally in the
St. Laurentius Kirche in
Herne before being donated to the cathedral.
Crucifixion group North of the cathedral, on the Horsteberg hill, behind the cathedral treasury, is a new bronze crucifixion group by
Bert Gerresheim of Düsseldorf, which was installed in 2004. Until then, a sandstone crucifixion group from the first half of the eighteenth century stood on the same site, which had been severely damaged by weathering and vandalism. Unlike most depictions of the scene on
Golgotha, the sculpture does not show Mary and John under the cross, but figures from later history. The blessed
Anne Catherine Emmerich and the blessed sister
Maria Euthymia stand below the cross, with Cardinal von Galen opposite them, holding the notes from his sermon "Wachrufe in einer politisch gefährlichen Welt" (Wake-up calls in a politically dangerous world). At the foot of the cross is a stone (German:
Stein) with the seal of the
Carmelite order, a reference to St
Edith Stein. Separated from them is a sitting figure of the Anabaptist king
John of Leiden, along with a mass of broken signs and symbols (the
Swastika, the
star of David, the
Hammer and Sickle, etc.), which are meant to indicate the hard times of human history. Muenster-100725-16289-Jesus.jpg|Christ on the cross Muenster-100725-16296-Üffing.jpg|Sister
Maria Euthymia Muenster-100725-16300-Galen.jpg|Detail: Sermon notes in Cardinal von Galen's hands Cross Münster Detail 3.JPG|Detail: Carmelite seal, referencing St Edith Stein Cross Münster Detail 5.JPG|Detail: Broken signs and symbols Muenster-100725-16292-Galen.jpg|Cardinal von Galen == Cathedral treasury ==