Archaeologists found 222 bronze pipes,
bells, and other objects hidden by Crusaders. Built in 11th-century
France for Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity, the organ will go to
Terra Sancta Museum.
On
May 20, 2025, the team behind the Resound project achieved a milestone
in Jerusalem: several original pipes of a medieval organ emitted sound
without restoration. The instrument came back to life in a monastery in
Jerusalem’s Old City and was set to be housed at the Terra Sancta
Museum, close to the Bethlehem church where it originally sounded.
Before unveiling the instrument on Monday, David Catalunya told a news
conference that attendees were witnessing a grand development in the
history of music. “This organ was buried with the hope that one day it
would play again. And the day has arrived, nearly eight centuries
later,” said Catalunya, the director of the team of researchers,
according toThe Independent.
Inside Saint Saviour’s Monastery, music
mingled with church bells as Catalunya played a liturgical chant called
“Benedicamus Domino Flos Filius.” During restoration work, it became
clear that some of the original pipes still functioned as they did
hundreds of years ago, and eight of the organ’s pipes retained sound
quality. Catalunya described the sound as “surprising and with a lot of
character, very rich and varied throughout the register between bass,
mid, and treble pipes”.
The pipe organ included original pipes
from the 11th century. Researchers said it was constructed in France in
the 11th century and relocated to the Holy Land in the 12th century to
be used in the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, where it accompanied
the Crusader liturgy. After a century of use, the Crusaders buried the
organ to protect it from invading Muslim armies, along with other
liturgical objects, including bells, following the expulsion of Latin
clergy in the 13th century.
The importance of the organ went
unnoticed for more than a century after workers building a new
Franciscan hospice for pilgrims in Bethlehem discovered it in 1906 in an
ancient cemetery. Archaeologists uncovered 222 bronze pipes, a set of
bells, and other objects hidden by the Crusaders. The possible sonic
connection of the buried bells was still under investigation.
Starting in 2019, a team of four
researchers led by Catalunya set out to create a replica of the organ as
part of the Resound project developed by the Complutense Institute of
Musical Sciences in Madrid. The project was financed by the European
Research Council. The restoration included manufacturing replicas in the
Netherlands to reconstruct missing parts, transporting the pieces to
Jerusalem, and comparing them with original pipes preserved in the Terra
Sancta Museum. A portable organ case was used for acoustic tests during
the comparisons. The project remains ongoing, and the researchers
warned that the results obtained so far were not definitive. They expect
to achieve a first experimental version of the organ within six to
eight months, and the final objective was to completely reconstruct the
instrument in the coming years. The researchers planned to finish
restoring the organ and create copies for churches across Europe and the
world so its music would be accessible to all.
Organ builder Winold van der Putten
placed the original pipes alongside replicas he created based on ancient
organ-making methods and built a portable wind chest based on a 3D
model. Close study of the original pipes illuminated some of the ancient
methods. The original pipes, making up about half of the organ, still
bore guiding lines made by the original Ottoman craftsmen and engraved
scrawls indicating musical notes. “This is an amazing set of information
that allows us to reconstruct the manufacturing process so that we can
build pipes exactly as they were made about a thousand years ago,” said
Catalunya.
“It was extremely moving to hear how
some of these pipes came to life again after about 700 years under the
earth and 800 years of silence,” said Koos van de Linde. “They knew very
well what they wanted to hear... The hope of the Crusaders who buried
it was not in vain,” added van de Linde. “Finding a living dinosaur,
something that we never imagined we could encounter, suddenly made real
before our eyes and ears,” said Álvaro Torrente, director of the
Instituto Complutense de Ciencias Musicales in Madrid.
Catalunya, who in 2019 was a researcher
at the University of Oxford when he located a reference that led him to
initiate research on the organ, framed the work and the sound in
historical terms. “It’s a way of building pipes, of thinking about music
totally differently. In four centuries, music and the construction of
organs - organ building - evolved significantly,” said Catalunya. He
said the timbre of the organ’s sound was very different from that of a
modern or even Renaissance organ.
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