This public holiday only applies to Weingarten, the stores in Ravensburg are open
The history of the Blutritt
Probably before the 16th century, the custom developed in Weingarten of holding a procession with horses on the Friday in the week of supplication, i.e. the Friday after the Feast of the Ascension, carrying the relic of the Holy Blood instead of the usual cross particle. This form of blessing the land and people is still performed on the so-called Blutfreitag. Until the 17th century, the Blutritt was associated with a border bypass of the Weingarten area. This involved fathers taking their sons who had come of age and slapping them in the face at prominent points. The Blutritt was first mentioned in writing in 1529 and was already described as a custom "of old" at that time.
This Upper Swabian holiday, with over 1,500 riders and just as many musicians, has long been regarded as the largest and probably oldest equestrian procession in Europe, which attracts several thousand pilgrims and visitors every year and traditionally begins on the evening of Ascension Day with the sermon in the basilica and the great candlelight procession to the Kreuzberg.
Downloads
- Semesterplan Sommersemester 2025 (PDF, 328.78 KB)Alle wichtigen Termine im Semester auf einen Blick!
- Semester schedule for the summer semester 2025 (PDF, 805.32 KB)Important dates and deadlines for students at RWU