Ottoman period At the end of the 19th century, there were already numerous
Germans going on organised
pilgrimages to Jerusalem, some offered by the
German Association of the Holy Land, founded in 1895 through a merger between the Association of the Holy Grave (est. 1885) and the Palestine Union of the German Catholics. Since 1866 there has been a small guest house for German pilgrims on a street leading to the
Jaffa Gate. At a meeting with the German
Kaiser Wilhelm II during
his travels through Palestine in 1898, the German
Lazarist, Friedrich Wilhelm Schmidt, suggested building a new, bigger and more suitable accommodation for pilgrims. The Kaiser had already supported the construction of the
Lutheran Church of the Redeemer and the establishing of the
Benedictine Abbey of the Dormition on
Mount Zion. With his support, the German Association of the Holy Land successfully acquired two parcels in the immediate vicinity of the Damascus Gate in 1899. The pilgrim hospice project was taken on by the architect of the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cologne, Henrich Renard, who was also responsible for building the Abbey of the Dormition and the Dormitio Church on Mount Zion at the same time. The first foundation stone was laid on 20 March 1904. In 1908 the Saint Paul Hospice was opened and entrusted to the Catholic
Sisters of St. Carl Borromaeus. It offered space for approximately 160 guests and it quickly became a much beloved place among German pilgrims on their way to Jerusalem. Due to the outbreak of the
First World War and the consequent halting of organised pilgrimages, the Paulus-Haus was closed and for a short time used as a headquarters and recuperation facility for German soldiers.
British period After the collapse of the
Ottoman Empire, Jerusalem came under the control of the
British Mandate of Palestine and became the seat of the
high commissioner and the mandate administration. The Paulus-Haus was seized by the
British Armed Forces and used as a general consulate until 1948. When the British mandate ended, the building was returned to the German Association of the Holy Land.
Jordanian period As a result of the division of Jerusalem after the
Palestine War, the Paulus-Haus found itself in the Jordanian section of Jerusalem. Due to the military action, the activity of the
Schmidt's Girls College was interrupted and the school, housed since 1886 in the Old Hospice on what is today
Hillel Street in Israeli West Jerusalem, was first moved into the Paulus-Haus in 1950, and into a newly constructed building adjacent to it in 1967.
Israeli period Since 1967, the Paulus-Haus has resumed its role as a pilgrim accommodation and from 1989 onwards, along with the Schmidt's Girls College, has been entrusted to the international convent of the Sisters of the
Congregation of Jesus. ==Layout==