Worried they might otherwise be destroyed, mid-13th century
Crusaders buried the 13 bronze bells near the church on the eve
of a Muslim offensive, slathering them in animal fat to protect
them from rust, said David Catalunya, who is leading a project
to build facsimiles of them.
"It's a very long process, not only in terms of constructing the
materiality of the instruments but also its cultural context and
its intellectual context," said Catalunya, a researcher from the
universities of Oxford and Wuerzburg, Germany.
With the exploratory research phase complete, he estimates it
will take about five years to cast fully functioning copies.
Meanwhile, a knock of the knuckles is enough to bring a clear,
high-pitched chime from the originals, whose clappers have long
since rotted away - as demonstrated to Reuters at the Custody of
the Holy Land for the Roman Catholic church, which holds the
unique collection.
"It's half of the original sound, (which) was much richer and
louder and a little bit lower," Catalunya said.
The bells were part of a carillon that accompanied chants inside
the church, said Franciscan friar Father Stephane, the Custody's
liturgist.
They were discovered in the early 20th century, along with 222
Mediaeval copper pipes from the Church of the Nativity's organ,
during construction at the church's Franciscan compound, Father
Stephane said.
The collection also includes the sceptre of the Bishop of
Bethlehem and candlesticks from the 12th century which,
according to Catalunya, were made in France, suggesting a shared
provenance with the bells and organ pipes, which Father Stephane
says are the oldest in Christendom.
Father Stephane said he hoped the collection would be displayed,
and played, at a Jerusalem museum the Custody plans to open by
2024.
"These bells are very significant for us because they are the
bells of Bethlehem (and a) symbol of Nativity in the Christian
world," he said.
(Writing by Rinat Harash; Editing by Dan Williams and John
Stonestreet)
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