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Innsbruck and its Church of St Jacob

Ian Rumbold and Reinhard Strohm

The parish church of St Jacob, Innsbruck (the predecessor of the present-day baroque cathedral) is the institution where at least some parts of the Leopold codex were most probably used. St Jacob’s was the ecclesiastical centre of the town, which since 1420 had been the main residence of the Dukes of Austria in the county of Tyrol. The church was adjacent to the ducal palace (the ‘Mitterhof’, see » Abb. The ducal court of Innsbruck) and is today enclosed within its precincts, the Hofburg.[7] Friedrich III (Holy Roman Emperor 1452–93) had been born at Innsbruck in 1415; his cousin Archduke Siegmund (or Sigismund) was born there in 1427 and ruled the Tyrol from 1446 until his resignation in 1490. Innsbruck also became an important centre for Siegmund’s successor, Maximilian I (King of the Romans 1486, Holy Roman Emperor 1508, d. 1519), after he took control of Tyrol in 1490.[8] At his command, the famous Goldenes Dachl (Golden Roof) of Innsbruck was built to commemorate Maximilian’s wedding to Bianca Maria Sforza, which was celebrated here in 1494 (» I. Kap. The arrival of Bianca Maria). Completed in 1500, it is a balcony roofed with fire-gilded copper tiles, from which the couple could observe pageants taking place in the square below (» Abb. The Innsbruck palace).

[7] It is not to be confused with the Hofkirche, adjacent to the Hofburg, which was completed in 1553 and contains Maximilian’s cenotaph.

[8]  » I. Music and ceremony in Maximilian’s Innsbruck (Helen Coffey).