To spot the Franciscan Church, look for a long, pale building with a sloping roof, arched windows, a pair of quaint green-and-red towers, and a stone fountain crowned by a statue right in front of it on Franziskanerplatz.
Take a slow breath-the air here is thick with the layers of Lucerne’s history, and you’re about to step into a place where monks rustled by in threadbare robes, noblewomen sealed deals over land, and the line between mystery and legend sometimes seemed as thin as the mist over Lake Lucerne. This is the Franciscan Church-better known in older times as the Barefoot Church. Yes, you heard right, the barefoot monks, or “Barfüsser,” strolled these very grounds. They came to Lucerne in the 1200s, bringing with them their humble order and a knack for building places that would outlast even the fanciest shoes.
Now, whose name do you have to thank for all this grandeur? That would be Lady Gepa von Wolhusen. She wasn’t just generous-she bought up local lands and gave them to the monks, making sure their convent could thrive on the city’s edge. Originally, this place stood outside Lucerne’s tiny medieval heart, out near the road to Unterwalden. But let’s be honest: between the growing city and the growing order, “edge” didn’t stay “edge” for long. By the 16th century, the city had wrapped around these walls.
Picture the medieval monks: digging gardens, tending the sick, and at the end of the day, heading into “St. Maria in der Au” to pray under high, vaulted ceilings. The air would have been thick with incense and the soft shuffle of feet on stone. The church not only served as a haven for prayer but also as a burial place-at first just for the order, but later locals bought up spots too. You see, even in the Middle Ages people wanted good real estate, in life and death! If you had enough means, you could ensure you’d be buried closer to the altar than your neighbors. Priority seating wasn’t just for concerts, after all.
With all these burials, things got a little… crowded. By the late 1500s, the church’s graveyards were overflowing, leading to a less-than-heavenly problem: the smell! The city council tried to close it down, but only succeeded when it was clear the “perfume” was driving folks out faster than any sermon. Workers even tried lime to speed up decomposition. Unfortunately, they found out that lime might preserve more than it breaks down. I guess you could say that was Lucerne’s first “failed chemistry experiment!”
As centuries passed, the church was constantly being changed and repaired. The biggest makeover came in the 1500s, giving us the rich interior you’d see today-from the intricate late-Gothic choir, adorned with carved stalls and vaults, to side altars that honor saints from all over. At one time, a mighty blast from the old Musegg tower shattered the original stained glass; the new windows were “modern” for 18th-century standards-plain and bright, letting loads more light in. Rumor has it, some worshipers missed the colors but appreciated not being hit by flying glass!
There was an added bit of drama after the Battle of Sempach in 1386. Here, Lucerne’s proudest war trophies-banners seized from enemy hands-were hung for all to see. Over hundreds of years, they decayed, but if you peer inside today, you’ll see painted replicas proudly displayed beneath the windows, like ghosts from the city’s fighting past.
Speaking of drama, take a look at the pulpit inside (imagine it now): it rests atop a kneeling angel, almost as if he’s spotted a late parishioner trying to sneak in unnoticed! And at the church’s side, under the green canopies of trees, stands the Marienbrunnen. It’s a copy now, but it was once a place where thirsty townsfolk drew water, their chatter bouncing off the old convent walls.
In the late 20th century, during some major renovations, archaeologists poked around beneath the floor and tangled with the old burial chambers. They found layers upon layers, from the earliest burials to those pressed flat by centuries of shifting ground.
Imagine the echoes: monks chanting, bells tolling, the soft patter of city life just beyond. Today, the Franciscan Church is a sanctuary of quiet beauty, a vault of stories both holy and very human-a place where history and legend walk hand-in-hand, never wearing shoes, but leaving footprints just the same.


