Lansen village church
The village church in Lansen , a place in the Mecklenburg Lake District in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania , essentially dates back to around 1400. It belongs to the parish of Rittermannshagen in the Rostock provost, Mecklenburg parish of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany .
The church is a rectangular brick building with a three-eighth choir closure on a base of hewn granite stones . The west gable is divided by a panel . The sacristy , spanned by a groin vault, was added in the 17th century, the portal vestibule on the south side in the 19th century, accompanied by a structural change to the west gable. In the south wall there is a former trough mill , which is also interpreted as a holy water font. The ceiling of the church, originally known as a barrel vault due to the preserved arches, is now spanned by a flat ceiling.
The church is furnished with a baptismal angel from the 18th century.
In the churchyard there is a free-standing bell cage , the bell on it was donated in 1865 by the then patron CG (Kuno) von Hahn and cast in goods by Johann Carl Ludwig Illies . In 1902 there were two more bells in it: a medieval bell and a bell cast by Vitus Siebenbaum in Schwerin in 1690 .
literature
- Friedrich Schlie : The art and historical monuments of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Volume 5, Schwerin 1902, pp. 375-377
- The architectural and art monuments in the GDR, Neubrandenburg district , p. 461/462.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Website of the Evangelical Lutheran Church District Mecklenburg and the Pomeranian Evangelical Church District in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany
- ↑ Schlie (Lit.), p. 376
Coordinates: 53 ° 36 ′ 3 ″ N , 12 ° 45 ′ 26 ″ E