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Essential
Architecture- Island Rügen
Bobbin Church |
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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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1400 |
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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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opening hours:
no regular opening hours
Entrance fees:
free
the building:
Nothing remains of the preceding structure (mentioned in
1250, originally owned by the Bergen monastery). The present church is
an imposing, fieldstone structure with shaped brick elements plastered
so as to leave the underlying surface visible. Brick is used for the
corners of the building, gables, buttresses, vaults, and all
ornamentation. The nave, choir, and sacristy were built in about 1400.
It has a rectangular nave with a flat wooden ceiling, and a retracted,
rib-vaulted choir. The two square choir bays have been repeated in
enlarged form in the nave. The interior is whitewashed and in 1955 was
painted in simple form. Floors are of limestone tiles. The choir is a
step higher than the nave. The windows were enlarged, probably in the
Middle Ages. The “Likhus” on the south side of the choir was built in
the 17th century, and was extended in the 17th century to provide access
to the patron’s box. The west tower was built in about 1500 of brick
with a sprinkling of fieldstone (the upper part still later). Steep
pavilion roof with a weathervane from 1657.
Oldest furnishings and accessories: Gotland limestone font from
about 1300 (presumably from the preceding church). Cuppa wall decorated
with twelve blind ogee-arches. Worth noting: the iron-grilled aumbry
inserted in the south wall of the sacristy (from about 1400), decorated
with Gothic tempera painting and carving, beside the altar sacrament
house with iron-studded wooden door under a canopy and quatrefoil. Other
furnishings: pulpit from 1622 (late Renaissance), high altar with choir
screen (1668) and patron's box, confessional from 1775 (workshop of
Michael Müller, Stralsund), portraits, sepulchral slabs. The churchyard
is worth a visit.
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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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