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Essential
Architecture- Hanseatic city of Lübeck
Marienkirche Protestant |
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architect
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location
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Lübeck
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date
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c. 1250 -1350 (bombed out 29 March 1942, rebuilt 1947-1959) |
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style
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Hanseatic
Brick Gothic (high-rising Gothic style of France was adapted to
north German brick). |
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construction
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Brick
At 38.5 meters (125 ft) the church has the highest brick vault in the world.
Taking the weather vanes into account, the towers are 124.95 meters (406 ft)
and 124.75 meters (405.5 ft) high. |
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type
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Church |
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Side view and Flèche |
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Main nave of St. Mary's
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View inside in 1820 (Engraving from Zietz,
Ansichten der Stadt Lübeck) |
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Floor plan (1900) |
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Broken bell war memorial |
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The Protestant Marienkirche (St. Mary's church) in Lübeck
(German: Lübecker Marienkirche or officially Marien zu Lübeck: St Mary's
of Lübeck) was constructed between 1250 and 1350. For many years it has
been a symbol of the power and prosperity of the old Hanseatic city, and
as Germany's third largest church it remains the tallest building of the
old part of Lübeck. It is larger than Lübeck Cathedral . Along with the
city, the church has been listed by UNESCO as of cultural significance.
It is a model for the brick Gothic style of northern Germany,
reflected in approximately 70 churches in the Baltic Area. In Lübeck,
the high-rising Gothic style of France was adapted to north German
brick.
St. Mary's is located in the merchant's borough, which stretches
from the docks of the River Trave all the way up to the church itself.
It is the main church of the local council and the people of Lübeck, and
was erected near the market and town hall.
History and construction
Constructions previously began during the course of the first
German colonization, resulting in a wooden church and then during the
reformation of the town's establishment in 1156, a bigger Romanesque
brick church. However, in the 13th century the prestigious spatial
demands of the self-conscious, commercially motivated inhabitants were
no longer satisfied. Romanesque sculptures of the décor of this second
Marienkirche are shown today in the St. Annen Museum.
Gothic Cathedrals in France and the Flanders made out of natural
stone were examples of modern construction from the three aisled Lübeck
Basilika. It is an exemplary stone gothic church and was the model for
many churches in the Baltic Sea area.
No one had ever built a church complete with a vault this high
before. A system of stilts diverts the force of the vault over a
buttress, thus making the enormous height possible. The incentive for
the Lübeck town council to commence such a huge construction was
justified due to an acrimonious dispute with the Lübeck Diocese. It was
wanted as a symbol of the free will of remote buyers and the world power
of the city after obtaining Reichsfrei status in 1226. With this huge
structure dwarfing the nearby romanesque Bishop’s church in the market
(founded by Heinrich der Löwe: Henry the Lion) and the Lübeck town hall,
it was a claim of supremacy regarding the acquisition of power opposite
emerging members of the Hanseatic League of 1356.
The Briefkapelle, or Epistle Chapel, was added by the south tower
in 1310. This chapel with its doorway to the public market also served
as an entrance hall to the cathedral itself. Another significant chapel
was added in 1390 by the Rat (city council). This brick chapel belongs
not to the church but to the city council itself.
In 1310 the Briefkapelle was built on to the east of the south
tower. At the same time it was an atrium and chapel, and formed a
portal; the church's second main entrance conveniently in the direction
of the market. Probably originally dedicated to the Holy Anna, the
chapel received its current name during the Church Reformation, when
paid scribes began to move in. The chapel, 12 m long, 8 m deep and 2 m
high is arched over a stone vault and is considered a master work of
high gothic construction. It has often been compared to English gothic
cathedrals and the chapter house of Marienburg. Today the Letter Chapel
serves the community as a church during winter, with services from
January to March: the main church area is far too cold to be used at
that time of year.
On the southeast corner of the ambulatory, the town council built
its own chapel in 1390, known as the Bürgermeisterkapelle (literally:
mayoral chapel). This can be recognized by the difference of glazed and
unglazed brick on the outside walls. In the upper floor of the chapel is
the "Trese" (tresecamere), the well secured depository for municipal
documents, rights, handfasts and contracts of the Lübeck city council.
This part of the church is still used to hold town property today.
From 1444 the eastern section of the ambulatory was extended with
a single bayed chapel, its 5 walls forming five eighths of an octagon –
the last gothic extension of the church. This chapel served as the
location for sung hourly prayers as part of the Marienverehrung (St
Mary's Worship), the Marienzeiten or Marientiden and consequently earned
the names Marientidenkapelle (St Mary’s Tidings Chapel or Sängerkapelle
(Singer’s Chapel).
In total the Marienkirche has nine large chapels and ten smaller
ones. The small ones serve mainly as gravesites for family members of
the Lübeck city council.
Destruction and restoration
On the night of Palm Sunday from the 28th to March 29 1942, the
church was almost completely burnt out during an Allied bombing raid
along with about a fifth of Lübeck city centre, including the Lübeck
Cathedral and St. Peter's Church.
The famous Totentanzorgel (Danse Macabre organ) was also
decimated, an instrument played by Dieterich Buxtehude and due to
requests asking for it to be examined when it needed repair, most
probably Johann Sebastian Bach. Its namesake artwork Totentanz (Bernt
Notke) was replicated in 1701, but destroyed in World War II.
Other works of art also destroyed in the fire include the
Gregorsmesse by Bernt Notke, the carved figures of the jube, the
Dreifaltigkeitsaltar (Trinity Altar) by Jacob van Utrecht and the Einzug
Christi in Jerusalem (Entrance of Christ into Jerusalem) by Friedrich
Overbeck. The bells of the church which fell down during the ensuing
blaze still lie on the ground in the position they fell to this day,
where they remain as a warning memorial. They can be seen in the
Gedenkkapelle in the south tower.
The church was protected by an emergency temporary roof for the
rest of the war. Reconstruction began in 1947 and 12 years later the
majority of this was complete. Because of the devastating effect of the
fire in the bombing, construction of the roof and spires out of wood was
dispensed with and instead, all the spires of churches in Lübeck rebuilt
after the war utilized a specially developed construction procedure of a
lightweight concrete roof underneath a layer of copper. The copper
covering would match the original design and the concrete roof would
avoid the possibility of a second fire.
The guilded flèche which stands 30 metres higher than the nave
roof was recreated in 1980 from old designs and photographs.
Lothar Malskat and the frescos
The heat of the blaze in 1942 had dislodged large
sections of plaster from the walls and ceiling, revealing the original
decorative paintings of the Middle Ages, some of which were documented
by photograph during the Second World War.
In 1948 the job of restoring these gothic frescos was given to
Dietrich Fey. In what became the largest counterfeit art scandal after
the Second World War, Fey hired local painter Lothar Malskat to provide
assistance for this task and together they would use the photographic
documentation to restore and recreate likeness to the original walls.
Since no paintings of the clerestory of the sanctuary were available,
Fey had Malskat invent one. Malskat consequently "supplemented" the area
with his own work in the style of the 1300s. In 1951 a committee of
experts criticised this work as improper, but only after Malskat's
declaration of his deeds in a 1952 judicial hearing.
Public perception overlooked the fact that the actual phonies by
Malskat make up only a small part of the church’s abundant paintings;
nevertheless they were erased at the insistence of the then-bishop.
The red-green-ochre triad high above the nave’s north wall with
its so called Annunciation scene with an angel between two pilgrims, was
used as the motif for postcards and as a template for both of the two
stamps of the commemorative charity celebrating 700 years of the
Marienkirche as of 1951 (Wohltätigkeits-Gedenkausgabe 700 Jahre
Marienkirche Lübeck), which produced four million stamps. It is not, as
often thought, the work of Malskat, but an original work of the 14th
century, as documented by photos taken in 1944.
Décor
The Marienkirche was generously equipped by donations
from the city council, its authorities and by families and individuals.
At the end of the Middle Ages it had 38 altars and 65 other donations.
These include:
A bronze font in 1337. Until 1942 it was located in the west of
church, which is now in the middle of the sanctuary.
Darsow-Madonna of 1420, heavily damaged in 1942, restored from
hundreds of individual pieces, positioned again in 1989.
Sakramentshaus (tabernacle) of 1479 with approximately 1000
bronzed, partly guilded individual pieces, at 9.5 m high, on the north
wall of the sanctuary. (Sakramentshaus = Sacrement House)
Winged altar of Christian Swarte (around 1495) with the Madonna
on the crescent.
Gravestone made out of bronze by Bernt Notke for the Hutterock
Family (1505) in the prayer chapel in the northerly ambulatory.
From the destroyed jube in 1942 only an elbow and the stone
figures remain: Elizabeth with John the Baptist as a child, Anna
Selbdritt, the Archangel Gabriel and Mary (Annunciation), St. John and
St. Dorothea.
Sandstone reliefs in the ambulatory (1515) with scenes from the
Passion History: in the north foot washing and the Last Supper, in the
south Christ in the Gethsemane and his capture.
In line with the Last Supper relief is Lübeck's emblem: once
significant in Lübecken legend, kleine Maus (small mouse), which gnaws
at rose trees. Its contact brings good luck.
The rest of the original pews remain in the Marientidenkapelle,
as well as the impressive Antwerpener Altar (Antwerp Altar) (1518).
Accompanied by scenes from her life, the death of Mary is shown in the
centre of the carved festive day side of the double winged altar. The
painted second consecration (to be seen during Lent) shows scenes from
the life of Jesus and of Mary. If the altar is completely closed (these
days during the Holy Week), the Annunciation can be seen.
St. John, wooden statue by Henning von der Heyde (around 1505).
St. Antonius, stone statue (around 1460).
In the Bürgermeisterkapelle (Mayoral Chapel) in the southern
ambulatory are parts of the original gothic pews.
With Christ weeping, one of the main works of the Nazarene
Friedrich Overbeck hangs in the Prayer Chapel in the northerly
ambulatory.
The choral barriers have been reconstructed from recent time.
During the new installation in 1959 the sanctuary had been enclosed with
walls to the tower gallery. These were broken off again in the 1990s.
The brass poles of the barriers were mainly still standing while wooden
parts were completely destroyed in the fire of 1942. Frames and crowns
of the arch were reconstructed from their remains with Oakwood.
"Verehrung der heiligen Dreifaltigkeit" (Worship of the Holy
Trinity) by Bernard van Orley.
The main article from the Baroque period, a vast High Altar which
was donated by merchant Thomas Fredenhagen and sculptured by Antwerp
sculpturer Thomas Quellinus from marble and porphyry (1697) was heavily
damaged in 1942. In 1951 the decision was made not to restore the altar,
but to replace it with a simple altar table out of limestone, with a
bronze crucifix of Gerhard Marcks. Individual items of the altar are set
up in the ambulatory: the Crucifixion with Mary and John, the marble
Predella with a relief of the Last Supper as well as the three crowned
figures, the allegoric beliefs and the Hope and the return of Christ.
The debate as to whether it is possible and desirable to restore the
altar as a main piece of baroque art to show European status has not
been decided yet.
Epitaphs
In the renaissance and baroque periods the church space
filled up with more and more epitaphs so that the church became an
almost hall of fame of various patriots of Lübeck. The epitaph in the
main nave had to be made out of wood due to static reasons, while those
in the side naves could also be made from marble. With all 84 wooden
epitaphs succumbing to the bombing raid fire in 1942, only 17 stone ones
on the walls of the side naves remain, some heavily damaged. These
remaining ones give an idea of how generously St. Mary's church was once
furnished. The several times restored epitaph of the Schonenfahrer and
town councilor Johann Füchting († 1637) is a Dutch work of the
transitional period between the Renaissance and Baroque times by the
sculptor Aris Claeszon who works from Amsterdam.
The Fredenhagen Altar
The main article from the Baroque period, a vast High
Altar which was donated by merchant Thomas Fredenhagen and sculptured by
Antwerp sculpturer Thomas Quellinus from marble and porphyr (1697) was
heavily damaged in 1942. In 1951 the decision was made not to restore
the altar, but to replace it with a simple altar table out of limestone,
with a bronze crucifix of Gerhard Marcks. Individual items of the altar
are set up in the ambulatory: the Crucifixion with Mary and John, the
marble Predella with a relief of the Last Supper as well as the three
crowned figures, the allegoric beliefs and the Hope and the return of
Christ. The debate as to whether it is possible and desirable to restore
the altar as a main piece of baroque art to show European status has not
been decided yet.
Stained glass
All windows and therefore stained windows were destroyed
in 1942. This includes the panes that had been saved from the
Burgkloster (Dominican/black frairs abbey) when it was demolished during
the 19th century and had been inserted in Saint Mary's by Carl Julius
Milde. In the reconstruction, simple lozenge shaped windows were
inserted into the lead glass with frugal decoration that usually
portrayed the crest of its donator. Some windows were crafted more
artistically:
The windows in the Marientiden chapel show next to the coat of
arms of the hanseatic towns of Bremen, Hamburg and Lübeck, the lyrics of
the Lübeck Cantata by Dietrich Buxtehude: Schwinget euch himmelan (BuxWV
96).
The monumental west window shows The Day of Judgement, designed
by Hans Gottfried von Stockhausen.
Both windows in the Totentanzkapelle (Death dance chapel),
drafted in 1955/1956 by Alfred Mahlau and originating from the
Berkentien glass manufacturer of Lübeck take motifs and aspects from the
1942 burnt up Totentanze (Death Dance) by Bernt Notke.
In the window of the Gedenkkapelle in the south tower (in which
the destroyed bells lie), coats of arms from towns, states and provinces
of east German territories.
The Briefkapelle (Letter Chapel) received windows created by
Professor Johannes Schreiter. Their torn lozenge pattern not only serves
as a reminder of the destruction of the church, but also the divide
between young people who do and do not worship Christ.
In December 2002 the tympanum window was added above the north
portal of the death dance chapel after a blueprint by Markus Lüpertz.
This window, like other windows in the Briefkapelle by Professor
Johannes Schreiter, was manufactured and assembled by the glass workshop
Derix of Taunusstein.
Courtyard
The courtyard to the south of the church gives an
impression of a medieval cityscape with its enclosure, the northern
facade of the Lübeck city hall, the office buildings even the St. Mary
workhouse. Lübeckan legend provides sparse substantial detail of the
sculptural arrangement on the cladding: a large granite cuboid right
next to the entrance was not placed there by the church construction
crew and forgotten about, it was put there by the devil’s own hand. To
the north and west of the church the courtyard appears as an open space,
which was cleared gradually through construction development in the
Middle Ages. Alone on the Schüsselbuden corner of Mengstraße is a
reminder of the Maria am Stegel chapel: its stone foundations (1415),
which served as a bookshop before the Second World War. A decision was
made in the late 1950s against its reconstruction and the remaining
external walls of the ruins were cleared away.
On Mengstraße opposite the church courtyard lies a three part
structure with facades of the 18th century: the Pastorat known as die
Wehde, after which the Blockbinnenhof Wehdehof is also named.
Significant pastors at St. Mary's
Jacob von Melle, mainpastor (1706-43) und polyhistor.
Music at St. Mary's
A rich offering of church music was available in the
Middle Ages, thus the Marientidenkapelle had its own choir. After the
reformation, the Katharineums' choir took over the task of providing
choral provisions for religious services.
Organs
In 1516 – 1518 the first “Große Orgel” (Grand Organ)
came about. Located on the west wall, it had two manuals, a pedal and 32
registers. This organ was extensively elaborated and enhanced upon
throughout the centuries, with among others, Friedrich Stellwagen
completing extensive work from 1637 to 1641. At the start of the 19th
century it had been increased to 3 manuals and a pedal, 57 registers and
4,684 pipes. However in 1851 a completely new organ was developed, built
by Friedrich Schulze in the spirit of the time, with 4 manuals, a pedal
and 80 voices within the historic prospect, which was restored and
adjusted instead by Carl Julius Milde. However because of the 1942 bomb
attack, the Große Orgel was destroyed and in 1968 a new one was
constructed by organ builders Kemper & Son, with a new mechanical
playing action. At the time, it was the biggest organ in the world. It
consisted of five manuals and pedal, 101 registers with 8,512 pipes, the
largest measuring eleven metres, the smallest the size of a cigarette.
Before the Große Orgel was the Totentanzorgel (Dance macabre
organ). It was installed in 1477 on the eastern side of the crossed nave
and so named because of the Totentanzkapelle (Death dance chapel), which
was already established to serve and hold requiems. After the Church
Reformation it was used for prayers and for Holy Communion services. In
1549 and 1558 Jakob Scherer added to the organ among other things, a
Rückpositiv and in 1621 it received chest work. In addition, extensive
repair work was completed by Friedrich Stellwagen during 1653-55, though
afterwards only smaller modifications were made to the organ. By this
point the organ itself had accumulated various worldwide interest, along
with the Arp-Schnitger-Orgel in St Jacob's of Hamburg and the "Klein
Orgel" (small organ) in the St Jacob's church of Lübeck. In 1937 it was
restored with the primary goal to bring it to a condition of how it
would have been in the 16th and 17th century. It was arranged to be
restored to a 17th century condition, alas it was destroyed along with
the Totentanz work of Bernt Notke in the 1942 fire.
In 1955 the Totentanz organ was restored by the organ
constructors Kemper & Son from 1937 specifications, although in the
northerly ambulatory for the Hochchor (high choir). Its original place
is now occupied by the astronomical clock. This post war organ which was
very prone to repair was replaced in 1986 by a new Totentanz organ,
built by the Führer company in Wilhelmshaven and positioned in the same
place as its predecessor. With a mechanical action, it had 4 manuals and
a pedal, along with 56 registers and approximately 5,000 pipes. This
organ is well suited for accompanying prayers and services, as well as
an instrument for presentation of older organ music before Bach's time.
A particular tradition of St Mary's is the use of both organs,
bass drums and a brass ensemble to compliment the choir in the church's
annual Hogmanay service.
Also, once on the jube was a continuo instrument for the choir -
the third organ in the church. With the 1854 conversion of the Große
Orgel, the chest work done by Jakob Scherer in 1560/61 was abscised.
This Lettern-Orgel (literally: Jube Organ) consisted of one manual, 7
registers. In 1900 the main veneer was kept but the mechanics were
replaced by a double manual pneumatic construction by master organ
builder Emanuel Kemper. This organ was also destroyed in 1942.
In the Briefkapelle there is an original organ intended for home
use, located in there as of 1948 and originally from east Prussia. The
Briefkappelenorgel (Letter Chapel organ), a singularly manualed
instrument with 16 voices was constructed by Johannes Schwaz in 1723 and
from 1724 served as the organ of the Schloßkapelle (Castle Chapel) of
Dönhofstädt in Rastenburg. From there it acquired the attention of
Lübeckan organ builder Karl Kemper in 1933. Several years after serving
as the main instrument for church musical events in the Hochchor (high
choir) of the Katharinenkirche, Walter Kraft initially obtained this
organ as a transitional instrument for the Briefkapelle, which was the
first area of St. Mary's church to be arranged so that religious
services could take place after the war. Today this organ provides
accompaniment for prayers as well as the Sunday services that take place
in the Briefkapelle from January to March during winter.
Organists
Above all organists in the 17th century that shaped the
course of musical tradition at St Mary's are Franz Tunder from 1642
until his death in 1667, and his successor and son-in-law Dietrich
Buxtehude from 1668 to 1707. Both were defining representatives of the
north German organ school and played the roles of both organists and
composers. George Friedrich Handel and Johann Mattheson had already been
guests of Buxtehude in 1703 and Johann Sebastian Bach came to Lübeck in
order to "eavesdrop" Buxtehude. Since then, St. Mary's is considered to
be one of the outstanding places of organistic significance in Germany.
With Abendmusiken, Tunder and Buxtehude drew away the idea of
having music in the church exclusively for religious services. Buxtehude
developed a strong form, with a sequence of five concerts on the last
two Sundays before Pentecost, as well as on the second until the fourth
Sunday of Advent. Strong success after Buxtehude's was also lead by
Johann Christian Schieferdecker (1679-1732), Johann Paul Kunzen
(1696-1757), his son Adolf Karl Kunzen (1720-1781) and Johann Wilhelm
Cornelius von Königslöw.
They all composed a succession of biblical oratorios for
Abendmusiken, among them "Israels Abgötterey in der Wüsten” (1758), "Absalon”
(1761) and "Goliath” (1762) by Adolf Kunzen and "Die Rettung des Kindes
Mose“ and "Der geborne Weltheiland“ (1788), "Tod, Auferstehung und
Gericht“ (1790) as well as "Davids Klage am Hermon nach dem 42ten Psalm“
(1793) by v. Königslöw.
Around 1810 this tradition began to come to an end. The taste in
music and the church had changed, and other circumstances (the
occupation by Napoleonic troops in the French Time and the
consequentially ongoing emergency financial situation) rendered the
implementation of ever more expensive concerts impossible.
In the early 20th century, St Mary's organist Walter Kraft
(1905-1977) tried to revive the tradition of Abendmusiken, with an
evening of Bach's organ music then an annual program of combined choral
and organ works. In 1954 Kraft created the "Lübecker Totentanz" (Lübeckan
Dance of Death) as a new Abendmusik.
Also, the current organist of St Mary's, Ernst-Erich Stender
(born 1944, Kraft's successor since 1973) continues to lead the
tradition of Abendmusiken with organ concerts in candle light during the
summer months.
The Lübeckan Boy’s Choir at St. Mary’s
Die Lübecker Knabenkantorei an St. Marien, as it is
known, has been at St. Mary’s since 1970. It was originally founded as
the Lübecker Kantorei in 1948. The choir sings regularly on Sundays and
other days of services for church celebration. The performance of the
Johannes Passion within conventional religious services in the Good
Friday afternoon has become a Lübeckan tradition.
The St. Mary’s Church of Lübeck today
Fold
Since the introduction of the reformatorial and
evangelical church order by Johannes Bugenhagen through the evangelical
1531 city council, the fold of St. Mary's now belongs to the
Nordelbischen Evangelisch-Lutherischen Kirche (Nordelbischen Evangelical
Lutheran Church). Services take place on every Sunday and holiday from
10 o'clock. On Sunday evenings there is normally a prayer service with
Taizé singings in the Marientidenkapelle. From Mondays until Saturdays
in the summer there is a "Kurzandacht" (short prayer) for the "Wort zum
Alltag" (literally: Word to everyday life), with organ music from 12
o'clock (after the figures of the astronomical clock change places),
where tourists and the residents alike are welcome to use this service
for personal reflection.
Hours
May until October: weekdays at 12:15 for approximately 1
hour. Particular opening times: April until December, the dates set by
agreement.
Astronomical clock
Built in 1561 through to 1566, the Astronomical Clock is
considered to be a real treasure of both art history and sacred history.
It was located behind the High Altar in the ambulatory but was
completely destroyed in 1942. Only one dial (which had been replaced
with an earlier restoration) remains in the St. Annen Museum. The new
Astronomical Clock was constructed on the East side of the Northern
transept in the "Death dance" chapel. It is the work of Paul Behrens, a
clockmaker in Lübeck, who planned it as his lifetime achievement from
1960 - 1967, collected donations for it and constructed the elements of
the clock himself. He also maintained the clock until his death. The
clockface is a simplified duplicate of the original. With a complicated
mechanical system, the clock shows planetary positions, phases of the
sun and moon, signs of the zodiac (astronomically, not astrologically),
the date on which Easter falls and the Golden Ratio. At 12 o'clock
midday the bells ring out and the movement of the figures before Christ
consecrating spurs into action. The figures were originally Electors;
after post-war reconstruction they are now eight representatives of the
different races and peoples of the world.
Carillon
The 36 bells of the Carillon partly originate from the
Katharinen Church in Danzig and were installed into St Mary's after the
Second World War. A complicated system of mechnics play alternating
choral melodies on every half and whole hour. At Easter and Christmas
time the organist manipulates the Carillon at noon by hand.
Bells
The peal of bells originally hung in the south of the
two towers in the "Glockenstube" (bell parlour) 60 metres high. The
powerful drafts of wind on the 1942 Palm Sunday air raid (in order to
feed the fires oxygen) were strong enough to ring the bells before they
fell down. The remaining two bells, the oldest one of 1508 and the
Pulsglocke of 1668 (weighing 7134 kg) were left as a stark memorial. In
the south tower the Carillon was installed after the war.
The current bell peal of seven voices hangs in the north tower.
It ranks among the largest and deepest pitched of its kind in northern
Germany. The three old bells (c´, d´, f´) originate from churches in
Danzig: they came as loaned bells from the Hamburger Glockenfriedhof
(Hamburg Bell Cemetery) and were immediately installed as emergency
bells after the Second World War.
After the new Pulsglocke bell was donated in 1951 by Chancellor
Adenauer for the 700 year anniversary of the St. Mary's church, the peal
of bells was further completed with the 1985 casting of 3 more. They
have inscriptions on them which refer to peace and reconciliation.
In 2005, the entire bell parlour was reorganized. The steel bell
chair from the reconstruction was replaced with a wooden one and the
bells were hung straight onto wooden yokes, thus the peal of the bells
rings out with more brilliance.
Number. Name / Function Caster Cast year Weight in kg Diameter in
m Nominal Place of origin
1 Pulsglocke Friedrich Wilhelm Schilling, Heidelberg 1951 5 817
2.10 G-flat° +8 -
2 Bet- und Sonntagsglocke Gebr. Bachert, Bad
Friedrichshall-Kochendorf 1985 4 668 1.93 A-flat° +10 -
3 Abendglocke (Friedensglocke) Gebr. Bachert, Bad
Friedrichshall-Kochendorf 1985 2 994 1.71 b° +9 -
4 Gratia Dei Johann Gottfried Anthonÿ, Danzig 1740 2 400 1.65 c´
+5 Danzig, St. Johann
5 Osanna Benjamin Wittwerck, Danzig 1719 1 740 1.44 d´ +6 St.
Mary's Church, Gdańsk
6 Versöhnungsglocke Gebr. Bachert, Bad Friedrichshall-Kochendorf
1985 1 516 1.32 E-flat´ +10 -
7 Dominicalis Johann Gottfried Anthonÿ, Danzig 1735 850 1.11 f´
+11 Danzig, St. Johann
Dimensions
Total Length: 103 m
Length of the middle nave: 70 m
Vault height in the main nave: 38.5 m
Vault height in the side naves: 20.7 m
Height of the towers: 125 m
Floor area: 3300 m²
Notes
1. ↑ see Hasse, Marienkirche, S. 236
2. ↑ Max Hasse, Marienkirche
References
Michael Gorra. The Bells In Their Silence: Travels
Through Germany. Princeton University Press, 2004. ISBN-10 0691117659. A
thoughtful essay, see the last chapter of the book.
Max Hasse: Die Marienkirche zu Lübeck. Deutscher Kunstverlag,
München 1983. ISBN 3422007474
Günther Grundmann: Lübeck In: Deutsche Kunst und Denkmalpflege
1955 pp 81. Deutscher Kunstverlag München/Berlin 1955.
Ernst Roßmann: Naturwissenschaftliche Untersuchung der
Wandmalereien im Chorobergaden der Marienkirche zu Lübeck, anlässlich
des Lübecker Bilderfälscherprozesses. In: Deutsche Kunst und
Denkmalpflege 1955 pp 99. Deutscher Kunstverlag München/Berlin 1955.
Peter Hirschmann: Was soll aus den gefälschten Wandbildern in St.
Marien zu Lübeck werden? In: Deutsche Kunst und Denkmalpflege 1955 pp
106. Deutscher Kunstverlag München/Berlin 1955.
Hinnerk Scheper: Restaurieren und Berufsethos In: Deutsche Kunst
und Denkmalpflege 1955 pp 109. Deutscher Kunstverlag München/Berlin
1955.
Joachim Goll: Kunstfälscher. E.A.Seemann Verlag Leipzig, 1.
Edition. 1962 (with citations list)
K. Wehlte: Was ging in Lübeck vor? In: Maltechnik 61/1955. S. 11.
George Savage: Forgeries, Fakes and Reproductions. London, Barrie
& Rockliff, 1963
Exhibitions catalogue of Essen and Berlin: Fälschung und
Forschung. Hrsg.: Museum Folkwang, Essen, und Staatliche Museen
Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin. 1976. ISBN 3-7759-0201-5.
Christine Lehmann: MacPherson und das Echo des Ossian, Die Angst
des Han van Meegeren und Malskat und die gotischen Truthähne in
Gaunergeschichten, Hamburg, Rasch and Röhring Publishers, 1988
Michel-Rundschau 7/1988 (Page 538: Lothar Malskat gestorben)
Karl Corino (ed.): Universalgeschichte des Fälschens. 33 Fälle,
die die Welt bewegten. Von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, Eichborn Verlag,
Frankfurt/Main, 1996.
Günter Grass: Werkausgabe Band 11 Die Rättin. Steidl Edition,
Göttingen 1997, 493 Pages, ISBN 3-88243-492-9.
50 Jahre Lübecker Knaben Kantorei an St. Marien, Commemorative
volume by Konrad Dittrich, Lübeck 1998
Die Hanse. Macht des Handelns - Der Lübecker Fernhandelskaufmann,
Ausstellungskatalog „Gebrannte Größe“ in Rahmen der Initiative „Wege zur
Backsteingotik“, Monumente, Publikationen der Deutsche Stiftung
Denkmalschutz, 2002, ISBN 3-935208-13-8
Die Glocken von St. Marien. Ein Briefwechsel zwischen Peter
Guttkuhn und Günter Grass. In: Treffpunkt 3, Lübecker Autoren und ihre
Stadt. Lübeck 1993, ISBN 3-7950-3209-1.
For a discussion of role models and successor buildings of St.
Mary, see also: Heike Jöns: Die Lübecker Marienkirche als Hauptbau der
kathedralgotischen Backsteinarchitektur im Ostseeraum. In: Zeitschrift
des Vereins für Lübeckische Geschichte und Altertumskunde 76/1996. pp.
223-254.
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