Sietow village church
The village church in Sietow (district Sietow-Dorf) in the Mecklenburg Lake District in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania is a listed church building from the 13th century.
history
The church was built before 1344, when the village of Sietow and the church patronage came to the Dobbertin monastery . In 1582 there was a visit to the church by the Dobbertin monastery office. In 1649 there was another visit to the church by the monastery office with Superintendent Samuel Arnoldi from Güstrow, Kloster-Syndicus Dr. Joachim von Neesen from Güstrow and Pastor Petrus Zander from Dobbertin.
During the Thirty Years War the central nave was destroyed and on January 18, 1665 the monastery office began to rebuild. Around 1760 the tower collapsed to the field stone base in a storm. The new, slightly lower tower was built with a pointed spire. In 1788 there was a dispute between the provisional monastery from Blücher on Gorschendorf and von Weltzien on Benthen as patron of the church in Sietow with the Rittmeister von Altrock on Großkelle and Zierzow before the court court because of refused parish transports, the transport of the pastor to the churches.
From 1824 to 1826 the old stone wall around the churchyard was rebuilt. After completion, the Dobbertiner monastery captain Rittmeister Ferdinand von Raven personally planted twelve linden trees, which today almost cover the church.
From 1849 the church was extensively renovated. The new pulpit was consecrated in 1856 and the organ in 1866. Two bells were melted down in the two world wars except for the smallest one from 1588. During a renovation in the mid-1970s, the interior of the church was given its present form.
description
Exterior
The village church is a rectangular brick building with a recessed rectangular choir set to the east and a square tower built on to the west. The side walls of the choir and the substructure of the tower are made of hewn field stones . The east gable of the nave and the choir is made of boulder masonry and brick with a double toothed frieze and ogival panels. The three almost storey-high panels as Romanesque slots have smooth plastered wall and arch reveals. The two lower floors of the tower are made of field stone, the upper floor in half-timbered construction.
The windows in the east wall of the choir show typical forms of the Romanesque , while all the other windows were probably renewed over time and like the south and the walled north portal correspond to the formal language of the Gothic . The old priest gate, made of granite stones, on the south side of the choir only got its brick insert during renovations in the 19th century.
Interior
The nave is spanned by a lime-plastered vault and opens towards the choir with a pressed, pointed triumphal arch . The interior was designed in simple Gothic-style forms.
The church's furnishings include various works of art from the 18th century, such as goblets with paten, wine jugs and two large pewter candlesticks.
altar
The neo-Gothic altar shows a painting made by Karl Christian Andreae in 1873 with Christ and Peter in the Sea of Galilee. Gotthilf Ludwig Möckel , who was involved in the restoration of the Dobbertin Patronage Church in Lohmen at the time , provided the design for the altar with top . Since Möckel's expensive designs did not correspond to the simplicity of the Sietow conditions, the monastery captain Count von Bernstorff had commissioned the wood sculptor Adolph Siegfried from Güstrow for the carved frame of the altar in 1873 . Karl Andreae wrote to Count Bernstorff from Dresden on February 22nd, 1873. I am now at a loss because of the frames from Sietow. If it works, and if you insert my picture into the current altar wall surrounded by a modest strip, it would be best.
organ
In 1864, Pastor Stahlberg asked the Dobbertiner monastery captain Julius von Maltzan to buy an organ and the contract with Lütkemüller was concluded on November 22, 1866 after the local committee at the state parliament in Sternberg agreed. The organ (I / P / 9) was built in 1866 by the Wittstock organ builder Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller and placed on the west gallery. The organ test was carried out by the Doberan organ builder Heinrich Rasche in March 1866 , found it to be flawless and paid the approved price from the monastery treasury. As a neo-Gothic series prospectus with five pipe fields, the organ has a console on the right. It is a standardized work, the metal pipes have no tuning rollers.
Bells
Three bells hung in the upper wooden church tower . The largest was cast in 1708 by Christian Siegemund Mebert. The middle one was without any inscriptions or symbols. Both bells were melted down during the world wars. The smallest bell from 1588 is still present, which was cast in Waren by the court bell founder Johann Carl Ludwig Illies in 1865 . The inscription reads: PRAISE JESUS CHRIST IN ETERNITY! AMEN.
Pastors
Names and years indicate the verifiable mention as pastor.
- 1328 - Pastor Johann
- 1541- Malchow . Martin Bamme (Bomme) from
- –1584 Simon Trechow, also Poppentin and Klink.
- 1585 - Bartholomaeus.
- –1638 Joachim Tilichius.
- 1638–1650 Matthias Pritzkow, then in Röbel.
- 1651-1657 Johann Hagemann.
- 1657-1678 Johann Heine, relieved of his office.
- 1679-1684 David Priestaff.
- 1686-1724 Johannes Müller.
- 1725-1757 Joachim Christian Bohn.
- 1757-1779 David Peter Ziel (Zylius), also Poppentin.
- 1780-1786 Georg Joachim Adolf Ziel
- 1787-1813 Otto Gottfried Friedrich Heinrich Engel.
- 1814-1856 Christoph Ernst Johann Schmidt.
- 1856-1870 Johann Christian Daniel Stahlberg, 1868 prepositus, 1885 church council.
- 1870-1918 Wilhelm Ernst August Lange 1884 prepositus, 1909 church council.
- 1918-1935 Wilhelm Johann Friedrich Lange, previously in Zurow .
- 1935–1937 Hans Peter Meyer-Bothling, then Alt Kalen and Ludwigslust.
- 1937–1952 Max Salzmann.
- 1953–1973 Walter Rütz.
- 1975–1977 Hans Jürgen Schuchardt.
- 1979–1988 Bert Möller.
- 1994-2000 Greta Duvendack.
- 2001–2018 Dietrich Scharnowski.
- 2018– Eckart Kellers .
Parish
Combined with the churches in Poppentin and Klink since 1980, the Sietow village church today serves the Sietow parish in the Neustrelitz provost, Mecklenburg parish of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany .
The parish of Sietow includes the places Eldenburg Süd, Göhren-Lebbin, Grabenitz, Hinrichsberg, Klink, Klink-Urlaubersiedlung, Poppentin, Sembzin, Sietow, Sietow-Dorf, Wendhof and Zierzow.
literature
- Friedrich Schlie : The art and historical monuments of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. V. Band, The district court districts of Teterow, Malchin, Stavenhagen, Penzlin, Waren, Malchow and Röbel. Schwerin 1902, ISBN 3-910179-09-6 , pp. 437-440
- Georg Dehio : Handbook of German Art Monuments, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Munich, Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-422-03081-6 , p. 564.
- Detlev Kunter: It could be like that ... 700 years of Sietow. Röbel, Müritz 2000.
- Gerlinde Meißner: Manor villages around the Müritz. Speck 2008, pp. 205-206.
swell
Printed sources
- Mecklenburg record book (MUB)
- Mecklenburg Yearbooks (MJB)
Unprinted sources
-
State Main Archive Schwerin (LHAS)
- LHAS 1.5-4 / 3 documents Dobbertin monastery.
- LHAS 2.12-3 / 5 protocols of church visits.
- LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Provincial Monastery / Monastery Office Dobbertin. 7. 41. 5. Sietow parish, No. 4531 Repair of the church tower 1838–1857, No. 4482 Decoration of the church interior 1859–1863.
- LHAS 3.2-3 / 2 State Monastery / Monastery Office Malchow. No. 1455, 1458, 1679, 1778, 2138.
- LHAS 3.2-4 Knightly fire insurance.
- LHAS 5.11-2
- LHAS 9.1-1 Reich Chamber Court . Trial files 1495-1806.
- LKAS, OKR Schwerin, Specialia Dept. 3, 4.
- LKAS, OKR Schwerin, personnel and exams.
- LKAS, OKR Schwerin, Brother Council of the Confessing Church.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ MUB IV. (1867) No. 2618
- ↑ LHAS 2.12-3 / 5 protocols of church visits. No. 160.
- ↑ LHAS 2.12-3 / 5 protocols of church visits. No. 170.
- ↑ LHAS 9.1-1 Reich Chamber Court (trial files) Q21, Acta priora.
- ↑ LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 4488.
- ^ Georg Dehio: Sietow, district of Müritz. 2000, p. 564.
- ↑ LHAS 5.11-2 Minutes of the Landtag. November 13, 1872, no.22.
- ↑ LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. Nr. 3843 Dedication of the church in Lohmen.
- ↑ LHAS 5.11-2 Minutes of the Landtag. November 17, 1864, no.22.
- ↑ LHAS 5.11-2 Minutes of the Landtag. November 22, 1865, no.15.
- ↑ LKAS. OKR Schwerin, Sietow Parish, No. 031 Organ, 1866.
- ↑ LHAS 5.11-2 Minutes of the Landtag. November 28, 1866, No. 7.
- ^ Friedrich Drese: The organ builder Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller and his work in Mecklenburg. Malchow 2010 p. 56.
- ^ Friedrich Schlie: That Kirchdorf Sietow. 1902, p. 440.
- ^ Gustav Willgeroth : The Mecklenburg-Schwerin Parishes since the Thirty Years' War. Wismar 1925.
- ^ Friedrich Schlie: The church village Sietow. 1902, pp. 437-440.
- ↑ LKAS, OKR Schwerin, Personalia and Examina, p. 316.
- ↑ LKAS, OKR Schwerin, Personalia and Examina, L 016.
- ↑ LHAS 3.3-3 / 2 State Monastery / Monastery Office Malchow. No. 2138 Election of a pastor.
- ^ LKAS, OKR Schwerin, Personalia and Examina, M 182.
- ↑ Information on the community
Coordinates: 53 ° 26 ′ 2.4 " N , 12 ° 34 ′ 55.3" E