Münster, city, North Rhine–Westphalia Land (state), western Germany. It lies on the small Münster-Aa River and the Dortmund-Ems Canal, northeast of Essen.
The community was first mentioned as Mimigernaford (“Ford over the Aa”) when Liudger (Ludger), a missionary sent by Charlemagne, founded a bishopric there in 804. It was renamed Münster in 1068 and was chartered in 1137. Münster’s favourable position at the intersection of long-distance trade routes and its wool trade with England gave it early economic importance and contributed to its influential position in the Hanseatic League in the 13th and 14th centuries. The Anabaptists, who constituted the radical wing of the Protestant Reformation, proclaimed their “kingdom of a thousand years” there in 1534. In 1535 Münster was captured by an army of Catholics and Protestants, and in 1536 the Anabaptists’ “king,” John of Leiden (Jan Beuckelson), was executed with two of his accomplices; the iron cages in which their bodies were publicly exhibited still hang in the Gothic tower of St. Lambert’s Church. A neutralized Münster was the scene of the peace congress (1645–48) that resulted in the Peace of Westphalia. In 1815 Münster became the capital of Prussian Westphalia.
Industries in Münster include the manufacture of machinery and textiles. It is also the centre of the Westphalian cattle-breeding market. Although the city suffered widespread destruction during World War II, most of the historic buildings damaged have been restored or rebuilt, including the gabled houses and arcades of the Prinzipalmarkt, the Gothic town hall (1335) with its Friedenssaal (“Peace Hall”), the cathedral (1225–65), and several churches—St. Ludger’s, St. Lambert’s, the Church of Our Lady, St. Martin’s, and St. Maurice’s (all 13th–15th century). The work of Johann Conrad Schlaun, a Westphalian architect of the Baroque period, is evident in the Westphalian Wilhelm University of Münster (founded 1780, a full university from 1902; in the 18th century an episcopal palace), the bailiff’s high court, and several churches. Notable modern structures include the state Chamber of Commerce building, municipal administrative offices, the theatre, the railway station (1956), and the Münsterland Hall. The centre of Westphalian culture, Münster has several cultural and scientific museums, including the Westphalian State Museum for Art and Cultural History and the Westphalian State Museum of Natural History, as well as technical and research institutes (including the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Biomedicine) and schools for the arts. Münster is ringed by parks where the city walls once stood, and it has a municipal zoo. Pop. (2003 est.) 269,579.