Reinsdorf village church (Niederer Fläming)

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Reinsdorf village church

The Protestant village church Reinsdorf is a late Romanesque field stone church in Reinsdorf , a district of the municipality of Niederer Fläming in the district of Teltow-Fläming in the state of Brandenburg . The church belongs to the parish of Zossen Fläming the Evangelical Church Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Oberlausitz .

location

Landstrasse 714 runs through the town as a central connecting axis coming from the northeast in a southerly direction. At the northern entrance to the village, the Hohenkuhnsdorfer Weg leads in a south-westerly direction through the village, and the Dorfstrasse in a south-east direction . The church stands between the two streets on a plot of land with a church cemetery , which is enclosed by surrounding residential buildings .

history

The building was built in the second quarter of the 13th century and was badly damaged in the Thirty Years War . It was not rebuilt until 1706. In the first half of the 19th century, craftsmen put on a roof turret.

Building description

The building was essentially made of field stones , which were carefully hewn and layered in layers. The semicircular apse is retracted and has three small arched windows that could have come from the construction period. The choir has a rectangular floor plan and is also drawn in. On the north side there is a " baroque " enlarged window. It is shaped like a pressed segment and its reveal is plastered .

The nave also has a rectangular floor plan. On the north side there are a total of four large, segment-arched windows, which are supplemented in the middle by a smaller window set below and a clogged gate. There are also four large windows on the south side; in the middle a gate. The west wall is also straight. There are two smaller windows; the lines run in the gable above .

An octagonal tower spire rises above the simple gable roof , which ends with a tower ball and cross.

Furnishing

The pulpit altar dates from the first quarter of the 18th century. It consists of a columnar structure with a centrally mounted, polygonal pulpit , which is supported by a kneeling chandelier angel. To the side are life-size figures of Moses and Paul of Tarsus , symbolizing the law and the gospel. The stalls are from the 18th century. A baroque epitaph commemorates Louise Christine Hanneken, née Bennen, who died in 1735 and whose family held the church patronage at the time . The tomb is flanked by two allegories and is decorated with a volute gable , a cloud glory and a ray of sun between two putti .

In the gallery is an organ that Wilhelm Sauer (organ builder) built in 1904. The instrument has six registers and a manual .

The building has a flat roof inside; the choir has been designed with a wooden barrel since 1906.

See also

literature

  • Georg Dehio (arr. Gerhard Vinken et al.): Handbook of German Art Monuments - Brandenburg. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich / Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-422-03123-4 .
  • Evangelical Church District Zossen-Fläming Synodal Committee for Public Relations (Ed.): Between Heaven and Earth - God's Houses in the Church District Zossen-Fläming , Laserline GmbH, Berlin, p. 180, 2019

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hiltrud and Carsten Preuß: The manor houses and manors in the Teltow-Fläming district , Lukas Verlag für Kunst- und Geistesgeschichte, 1st edition, November 29, 2011, ISBN 978-3-86732-100-6 , p. 244

Coordinates: 51 ° 54 ′ 26.9 ″  N , 13 ° 13 ′ 16.7 ″  E