Lansen village church

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Village church in Lansen

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

  1. Website of the Evangelical Lutheran Church District Mecklenburg and the Pomeranian Evangelical Church District in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany
  2. Schlie (Lit.), p. 376

Coordinates: 53 ° 36 ′ 3 ″  N , 12 ° 45 ′ 26 ″  E