Lausanne rings 16th-century warning bell for virus
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Lausanne rings 16th-century warning bell for virus
Night watchman of the Cathedral of Lausanne, Renato Haeusler looks on after manually ringing the 3600 kg "La Clemence" emergency bell in the Cathedral's belfry tower, on late March 27, 2020 in Lausanne, amid the spread of the COVID-19 (novel coronavirus). In addition to his regular job of shouting the hour every hour, keeping a six-century-old tradition alive, the night watchman will ring every evening at 10 p.m the bell, melted in 1518, to encourage people to solidarity and mutual aid in these troubled times by the coronavirus crisis. FABRICE COFFRINI / AFP.

by Eloi Rouyer



LAUSANNE (AFP).- Renato Hausler shouts out the hour from the top of Lausanne Cathedral then sounds a centuries-old warning bell, rung only when the normally-tranquil Swiss city is facing peril.

The nightwatchman is ringing La Clemence, a bell made in 1518, to call for mutual solidarity among the Lausannois in the face of the global coronavirus pandemic, Hausler told AFP.

Its 3.4 tonnes of steel make a hell of a din which cuts through the still night air, above the city and out over Lake Geneva.

Its C note rings in harmony with those of Marie-Madeleine, Lombard and the four other bells hanging in the tower.

Standing in his felt hat with a lantern to light the way, Hausler peals the bell with three strikes, a pause, six strikes, another pause, then repeats the pattern.

Every night without fail, Hausler or one of his stand-ins calls out the hour from 10:00pm to 2:00am, north, south east and west from the bell tower, up 153 stone steps from the cathedral floor.

Lausanne is one of the last places in Europe that still has a nightwatchman as a living timekeeper. Hausler has been doing the job full-time since 2002.

The first written references to a nightwatchman date back to 1405, after a huge blaze ripped through the city.

"During the disaster, the bell rang to encourage the townsfolk, to rally people together to fight the fire," said Hausler.

Linked with a network of watchmen on the ground, the cathedral watchman, perched on the highest point in Lausanne, sounded the alert around the city as quickly as possible.

More than 200 dead
Centuries on, perilous times are back on the shores of Lake Geneva and the bell rings out for a full three minutes.

More than 13,000 people in Switzerland have tested positive for COVID-19 and more than 230 people have died in the new coronavirus pandemic, according to the health ministry.

The French-speaking Vaud region surrounding Lausanne has seen the highest numbers of cases of all of Switzerland's 26 cantons, with nearly 3,000 people infected.

The Alpine country has not confined its population indoors but outdoor gatherings of more than five people are banned.

And in the evening, the streets of Lausanne, a student city that is usually very lively -- especially on weekends -- is strangely silent.

"Since these restrictive measures urging people to stay at home, it has completely changed," said Hausler.

"It is quiet all week, even from 8:00pm, and when I get here, there is hardly any activity around the cathedral or even in the city so it brings a tranquility that I have never experienced before.

"There is a real calm which resembles what it would have been like in the past, before there was all this traffic noise.

"There is perhaps just one last thing that would bring us right back to how things were in the Middle Ages: turning out the lights."

Besides Lausanne, only six other European cities are thought to keep up a nightly watch: Annaberg, Celle and Nordlingen in Germany; Ripon in Britain; Krakow in Poland, and Ystad in Sweden.

© Agence France-Presse










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