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Essential
Architecture- Berlin
Marienkirche |
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architect
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location
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located in Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse
(formerly Kaiser-Wilhelm-Strasse) in central Berlin, near the Alexanderplatz |
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date
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1292 |
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style
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construction
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granite and red brick |
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type
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Church |
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St. Mary's Church, Berlin
The St. Marienkirche (Church of St. Mary) is a church in Berlin,
capital of Germany. The church is located in Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse
(formerly Kaiser-Wilhelm-Strasse) in central Berlin, near the
Alexanderplatz. Its exact age is not known, but it was first mentioned
in German chronicles in 1292. It is presumed to date from earlier in the
13th century. It was originally a Roman Catholic church but since the
Protestant Reformation it has been a Lutheran church.
Along with the Nikolaikirche, the Marienkirche is the oldest
church in Berlin. The oldest parts of the church are made from granite,
but most of it is built of brick, giving it its characteristic bright
red appearance. This was deliberately copied in the construction of the
nearby Berlin City Hall, the Rotes Rathaus. During World War II it was
heavily damaged by Allied bombs. After the war the church was in East
Berlin, and in the 1950s it was restored by the German Democratic
Republic authorities.
Before World War II the Marienkirche was in the middle of a
densely populated part of the borough of Mitte, and was in regular use
as a parish church, but after the war this area was cleared of ruined
buildings and today the church stands in the open spaces around the
Alexanderplatz, and is overshadowed by the East Berlin television tower,
the Fernsehturm. Today the Marienkirche is the seat of the Lutheran
Church's Bishop of Berlin-Brandenburg, and is used mainly for ecumenical
services and church music meetings. There is a striking statue of Martin
Luther outside the church.
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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