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Essential
Architecture- Island Rügen
St. Mary’s Church in Waase on Ummanz |
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architect
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location
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Rügen, in the Baltic Sea off the coast of
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, north-eastern Germany. |
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date
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1291-1440 |
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style
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Hanseatic
Brick Gothic |
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construction
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Brick |
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type
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Church |
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Contact:
Phone (parish office) +49 (0)38305-328
Email (Rügen tourism office): info@ruegen.de
opening hours:
no regular opening hours
Entrance fees:
free
the building:
The chapel created in 1291 by Cistercian monks assumed
its present shape in 1440 when it was rebuilt as a brick church. The
half-timber framed nave (oak beams with brick fillings) was constructed
in the 16th and 17th centuries with the choir annex added in the 18th
century. Later restoration works served to expose paintings from around
1470 on the walls and the triumphal arch. The oldest decorative features
are the Gothic triumphal crucifix (around 1500) and the Gothic carved
altar created in 1520 at Antwerp. This altar is considered one of the
truly outstanding sacred works of art anywhere in Northern Germany and
bears close stylistic resemblances to the Bordesholm Altar at Schleswig
by Hans Brüggemann and Jan Bormann’s altar for the Güstrow parish church
made in Brussels at roughly the same period. The altar was originally
acquired by wealthy merchants from Stralsund for a local Church (St.
Nicholas’) and found its way to its present location only in 1708. The
pulpit was originally made for another church, too, probably again in
Stralsund, and the and brass chandelier (Renaissance) also comes from
there (from the “New Council Chamber“).
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links
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Special thanks to
www.eurob.org |
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www.essential-architecture.com
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