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・ St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church (Louisville, Kentucky)
・ St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church (St. Martinville, Louisiana)
・ St. Martin of Tours Episcopal Church
・ St. Martin of Tours' Church (Bronx)
・ St. Martin Parish School Board
・ St. Martin Parish, Louisiana
・ St. Martin River
・ St. Martin Secondary School
・ St. Martin Township, Stearns County, Minnesota
・ St. Martin's
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・ St. Martin's Cathedral
・ St. Martin's Cathedral (Gander)
・ St. Martin's Cathedral (Spišská Kapitula)
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St. Martin's Cathedral, Utrecht
・ St. Martin's Catholic Church
・ St. Martin's Catholic Church and Grotto
・ St. Martin's Chamber Choir
・ St. Martin's Church
・ St. Martin's Church (Starkenburg, Missouri)
・ St. Martin's Church, Biberach
・ St. Martin's Church, Groß Ellershausen
・ St. Martin's Church, Landshut
・ St. Martin's Church, Netphen
・ St. Martin's Church, Riga
・ St. Martin's Church, Sherwood
・ St. Martin's Church, Warsaw
・ St. Martin's College (Malta)
・ St. Martin's Collegiate Church, Opatów


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St. Martin's Cathedral, Utrecht : ウィキペディア英語版
St. Martin's Cathedral, Utrecht


St. Martin's Cathedral, Utrecht, or Dom Church ((オランダ語:Domkerk)), was the cathedral of the Diocese of Utrecht during the Middle Ages. Once the Netherlands' largest church, dedicated to Saint Martin of Tours, it is one of the country's two pre-Reformation cathedrals, along with the cathedral in Middelburg, Zeeland. It has been a Protestant church since 1580. The building is the one church in the Netherlands that closely resembles the style of classic Gothic architecture as developed in France. All other Gothic churches in the Netherlands belong to one of the many regional variants.
Unlike most of its French predecessors, the building has only one tower, the Dom Tower, which is the hallmark of the city.
In 1674 the central portion of the cathedral with the nave collapsed in a storm, a tornado ripped through Utrecht causing many to die and split the cathedral in two. It has never been rebuilt, leaving the tower now isolated from the east end.
==History==
The first chapel in Utrecht was founded around 630 by Frankish clergy under the patronage of the Merovingian kings but was destroyed during an attack of the Frisians on Utrecht shortly thereafter. The site of this first chapel within Utrecht is unknown. Saint Willibrord (died 739), the Apostle to the Frisians, established a second chapel devoted to Saint Martin on (or close to) the site of the current building. This church was destroyed by the Normans in the 9th century during one of their many raids on Utrecht, but was reconstructed by Bishop Balderic in the 10th century. During this period St. Martin's came to be the principal church of Utrecht, see of the bishop. The church had its own small territorial close (known as an "immunity") and was led by a cathedral chapter of canons, who generally belonged to the nobility.
The church was repeatedly destroyed by fires and then rebuilt. A Romanesque style church was built by Bishop Adalbold and consecrated in 1023. It is thought to have been the center of a cross-shaped conglomeration of 5 churches, called a ', built to commemorate Conrad II. This building, also known as Adalbold's Dom, was partially destroyed in the fire of 1253 which ravaged much of Utrecht, leading Bishop Henry van Vianen to initiate the construction of the current Gothic structure in 1254. The construction of the Gothic cathedral continued into the 16th century. The first part to be built was the choir. The Dom Tower was started in 1321 and finished in 1382. After 1515, steadily diminishing financing prevented completion of this building project, of which an almost complete series of building accounts exists. In 1566, the ' or Iconoclast Fury swept across much of the Low Countries, justified by the Calvinist belief that statues in a house of God were idolatrous images which must be destroyed. As a result, many of the ornaments on both the exterior and interior of the cathedral were destroyed.
In 1580 the Utrecht city government devolved the cathedral from the Diocese of Utrecht to local Calvinists. From then on Protestant services were held in the building with one brief exception, in 1672 and 1673, during the Franco-Dutch War, when Catholic masses were again held in the cathedral. A year after the French retreat, the still unfinished and insufficiently supported nave collapsed on 1 August 1674 during a massive storm that caused a tornado. Over the subsequent centuries, much of the enormous building fell into further neglect. The pitiable state of the cathedral led to some small restoration activities in the nineteenth century, followed by major renovations in the early twentieth century with the aim of returning the Cathedral to its original state. However, the nave was never rebuilt.
The Catholic Church remained strong within Utrecht following the Reformation but was legally obliged to worship discretely in clandestine churches ('). One of these churches, St. Gertrude's, later became the principal cathedral of the Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands.
The Catholic Church, during the 1853 reestablishment of the episcopal hierarchy in the Netherlands, designated the former St. Catherine's church of the Carmelites as the cathedral of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Utrecht.

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