Attraction: Grossmünster
The Grossmünster, in Zürich, Switzerland, is a Protestant church built in the Romanesque style. It is one of the town’s four main churches.
According to legend, Charlemagne discovered the tombs of the patron saints, Felix and Regula, in the city, and on the spot had a church built as a monastery. The legend conveniently supports the narrative of a seniority claim over the Fraumünster church, which was founded by Charlemagne’s grandson, Louis the German. Nonetheless, recent archaeological evidence confirms the presence of a Roman burial ground at the site.
The Grossmünster Church was the starting point of the Swiss-German Reformation led by Huldrych Zwingli and Heinrich Bullinger in the first half of the 16th Century. The theological college which was then added to the monastery is now Zürich University.
Sigmar Polke’s stained glass windows, the Romanesque crypt, Augusto Giacometti’s choral windows, Otto Münch’s bronze doors, and the Reformation Museum cloister are just a few of many highlights of this church, which is the top attraction in Zurich.

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