The church was established in 1187 and the
Romanesque-style building was completed in the 14th century. The church was built by the citizens of the city and modeled after the
Church of St. Mary in
Lübeck. In ca. 1220
Pomeranian Duke Bogislaw II was buried in the cathedral. One of its two towers collapsed during a storm in 1456 and destroyed part of the church. Reconstruction lasted until 1503 and the entire church was remodelled based on a single-tower
hall church design. After the
Reformation, it was part of the
Pomeranian Evangelical Church. The church was destroyed again in 1677 during the
Scanian War and rebuilt between 1690 and 1693 in the
Baroque style. In 1893, the church was remodelled again however, the west tower collapsed during a storm in 1894 and had to be rebuilt. This renovation was completed in 1901 leaving the church with a spire of 119 metres (390 feet). Air raids on the night of 16 August 1944 during
World War II resulted in collapse of the spire added in 1901 and extensive damage to other parts of the building. The north wall, all altars and artworks inside were destroyed by the bombs and ensuing fire. Following the war, government officials were reluctant to allow reconstruction of the church however, a heritage conservator pointed out that demolition of the remaining structure would be more costly than rebuilding it. In 1971, work began on the church and continued for three years. The north wall was reconstructed in a modern style which did not harmonize with the rest of the building and the tower was stabilized, but the spire was not rebuilt. Instead, the tower was capped with a short
hip roof or pyramid roof resulting in a height of 60 metres (196 feet). After World War II, it became once again a
Roman Catholic church. ==Gallery==