1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
History

When church bells were transformed into weapons of war

September 21, 2018

On September 21, church bells will ring out throughout the whole of Europe in remembrance of the end of WWI. During the war many bells were melted down into artillery guns. The pain of this loss united the people.

Deutschland Glockenformer Hans Becker von der Kunstgießerei Rincker in Sinn
Image: picture-alliance/dpa

The deacon had resigned himself to what was about to happen. For some time he had tried to evade the decree, to keep its consequences to a minimum. But then at the end of July 1917, he had to recognize that his efforts had been in vain: The bells of his parish in the Rhineland-Palatinate town of Kusel would be taken down from the tower. They would then go to an ironworks to be melted down and turned into guns.

"They will speak a different language in the future," Deacon Karl Munzinger said in his sermon on July 22, 1917 about the loss. "It goes against any feelings, that they, who like no other preach peace and should heal wounded hearts, should tear apart bodies in gruesome murders and open wounds that will never heal."

With metal essential to the war industry in short supply, the Imperial Government issued a decree in March 1917 to turn bells into weapons of war. The decision distressed many citizens, even those who weren't Christian.

On September 21, bells will ring across Europe in remembrance of both this event and of the joy and relief attached to the end of the war on November 11, 1918. 

Read more - How World War I ended: 100 years later 

'The most painful feelings'

Bells had set the rhythm of the people for ages. "Church bells were and are the clock for daily life. When the death bell tolls, you know that someone is being carried to their grave. On Saturday evening at 10 minutes before 7 p.m. the bells herald the coming of Sunday: One can finally take a rest from work. That is the spiritual dimension of bells. All this ended in the First World War," said Rüdiger Penczek, a Protestant pastor from outside of Cologne.

Church bells await their fate in Rostock ahead of shipment to an ironworksImage: Gemeinfrei

Melting down these instruments of the church and turning them into artillery gave the bells the opposite meaning, said Penczek. The decree from March 1917 was disturbing.

"The implementation of the taking down of the bells, caused painful feelings among the clergy and population," said the Consistory in Speyer.

'Peace be the first chime she's ringing'

Even today at the beginning of the 21st century bells are part of daily life in Europe. It was even more so a hundred years ago.

"Still will it last as years are tolling / And many ears will it inspire / And wail with mourners in consoling / And harmonize devotion's choir." This is how Friedrich Schiller in 1799 described the role of the bell in public life. The sound brings the people together, joins the individuals to choir. "She doth move, doth wave. / Joy be she this city bringing, / Peace be the first chime she's ringing," the poem continued.

"Choir" and "peace" – both were brutally destroyed in the First World War. In place of the choir stood the military corps, peace flowed into fighting, everyday life toppled into a permanent curfew. And the bells remained silent.

Big Bertha was designed to destroy concrete-enforced forts and could launch projectiles as heavy as 800 kg (1760 lbs)

The collapse of the order and the silence of the bells are also known in the liturgical year, said Pastor Penczek. "On Good Friday the bells chime for the church service, but not the Our Father bell. The bells remain silent until Easter Sunday. And the silence of the bells makes clear that something has fallen apart."

Read more - Aftermath: Art in the wake of World War One' reveals deep scars

World falling apart

However, not everyone in the church was opposed to the decree. The authors from the Speyer Consistory, for example, welcomed the move and criticized the resistance from church communities, blaming the resentment in large part on the press. The press had spread "false ideas" about the bells.

"It is of great value when in this highly important matter the civilian and military authorities are supported by the clergy, whose sense of Fatherland in the duration of war has so often been proven," the Consistory wrote.

Around 44 percent of German church bells were melted down in the First World War.

Diversity of remembrance

Remembrance in every country has a specific slant. For the Germans, November 11 was the day of their defeat. The Poles on the other hand, whose country was divided and annexed for over 100 years by the Great Powers, celebrated a national revival. Czechs, Slovaks, Croats, Serbs and Slovenians, also celebrated their liberation from the rule of great empires like the Habsburgs or the Ottoman Empire.

Relief, joy and sorrow. The toll of the bells on November 11, 1918 evoked different emotions across Europe. These diverse perceptions should also be remembered, said Pastor Rüdiger Penczek. "Because everyone carries their own history, every country has its own wounds. That is also an expression of European diversity."

Skip next section Explore more
Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW