Saint Michael’s at Hildesheim, a Benedictine cloister church built in the eleventh century, was provided, towards the end of the twelfth century, with a painted ceiling consisting of oak boards. It represents the so-called ‘root of Jesse’, the genealogical tree of Jesus Christ. The ceiling, preserved in its original state except for a small part which was destroyed during the seventeenth century, was painted in lime-casein tempera. It was taken down in 1943 to protect it from destruction through air raids. It was restored in the years from 1955 to 1960. Later repaints were taken off and the original state regained. The pigments examined were identified as those known from the High Middle ,Ages, i.e. Lapis Lazuli, Orpiment, Natural Vermilion, Charcoal, Green Earth, Ochre, Verdigris as well as Lime White, which has been described by Cennini as ‘Bianco di San Giovanni’. Lead White has not been identified in any of the specimens analysed.