Early years At that time, the city of Zurich supported the popular
mendicant orders by assigning them free plots in the suburbs and asking them to support the city wall construction. The city's fortification was built in the east of the area in the late 11th or 12th century. The first Dominican friars settled, according to the chronicler Heinrich Brennwald, outside of the city walls of medieval Zurich at
Stadelhofen in 1230 AD, and in 1231 it was first mentioned that in Zurich was a new monastery under construction. In the
Schweizerchronik of 1513, Heinrich Brennwald calls for the Dominicans' arrival in Zurich in the year 1230. In two documents from 1231 a Dominican
oratorio is mentioned. In 1232 a sale of land to
Hugo von Ripelin, then the paddock prior, is mentioned. Initially, against the resistance of the Grossmünster canons, the Dominicans' inclusion in Zurich was granted in 1233/1235, "because they tirelessly drove the little foxes in the vineyard of the Lord". Located at the medieval
Neumarkt quarter, the commonly named
Predigerkloster was first mentioned in 1234 AD as a monastery of the
Dominican Order. The monastery consisted of a Romanesque church in the same place as today's Predigerkirche and the three-winged building complex attached to the north of the church. In 1254, a cemetery at the Predigerkloster was approved by
Pope Honorius III. The monastery was built at the edge of the city on a flat terrace between the now subterranean
Wolfbach stream and today's
Hirschengraben street. The monastery area was delimited by a wall from the urban environment. Remnants of this wall were found in 1995 on the present
Predigerplatz square. The hospital was erected in the west, beyond the Wolfbach stream at today's
Spitalgasse, before the Dominicans settled in Zurich. In the decades in which the monastery was built, the new fortifications, depicted on the Murerplan of 1576, were built at that location. The Neumarkt quarter arose simultaneously and was settled increasingly by
Beguines. Among other things, the orthogonal structure of the monastery, the town fortifications, and the
Chorgasse and
Predigergasse lanes are evident, and especially the latter is essential for this quarter; it leads from Neumarkt in a straight line to the southern portal, which was the main entrance to the church. The northern part of the monastery was predominantly used for agricultural purposes. Because of its location in the province of the order
Teutonia, the monastery influenced most of German-speaking Switzerland. It was in charge of the pastoral care of the
Oetenbach and Winterthur-Töss nunneries as well as the urban communities of the female
Beguines, who lived nearby the Dominican and Franciscan mendicants in separate quarters outside the monasteries. After the founding of the Dominican monasteries in Bern, Chur, and Zofingen, the counties of Baden and Uznach, the cantons Obwalden, Nidwalden, Zug, and Zurich, as well as parts of Glarus, Uri and Gaster, and the border areas around Schwarzwald and Klettgau remained under the pastoral care of the Zurich Dominicans.
Decline The highly ambitious dimensions of the Dominican Baroque church were designed in the early 14th century. But in the 1330s, the construction was already set, and it had remained unfinished for years. The second building phase ended in a much more harmonious construction, and much of the Romanesque building's substance was saved; for example, almost the entire Romanesque transept remained. was followed by a period of economic uncertainty reaching its peak with the plague of 1348/49, the persecution and killing of the Jewish citizens of the so-called
Synagogengasse in 1349, as well as the "Zurich night of murder" (
Mordnacht) by 1350, a failed counter coup of Brun's opposition under the son of
Johann I (Habsburg-Laufenburg), Johann II. Unlike the Franciscan and the Augustinian orders, the Preachers in Zurich pleaded to the Pope, another opponent of the political situation in Zurich, and therefore the monastery was forced to leave the city for several years. Its exile led to Winterthur and Kaiserstuhl and finally to
Rapperswil, whose
counts were the most prominent opponents of Brun's regime. This development represents the beginning of the general decline of the Zurich Dominican monastery. The monastery was disestablished on 3 December 1524, worship in the church was discontinued, and the buildings and income of the monastery were assigned to the adjoining
Heilig-Geist-Spital. == Buildings of the monastery ==