Holy Trinity Church (Budry)
Trinity Church in Budry (Kościół Trójcy Przenajświętszej w Budrach) Church in Buddern |
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The once Protestant and now Roman Catholic Church in Budry (Buddern) |
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Construction year: | 1738-1739 |
Inauguration: | 1739 |
Style elements : | Field stone church |
Client: | Evangelical Church Community of Buddern ( Church Province of East Prussia , Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union ) |
Location: | 54 ° 15 '14.1 " N , 21 ° 52' 48.3" E |
Address: | ul. Marii Konopnickiej Budry Warmia-Masuria , Poland |
Purpose: |
Roman Catholic Evangelical Lutheran parish church until 1945 |
Parish: | ul. Marii Konopnickiej 3, 11-606 Budry |
Diocese : | Ełk |
Website: | diecezjaelk.pl/parafie.html?sobi2Task=sobi2Details&catid=2&sobi2Id=16 |
The church in Buddern ( Polish: Kościół Trójcy Przenajświętszej w Budrach ) is a field stone building from the first half of the 18th century. Until 1945 it was a Protestant parish church for the parish of Buddern ; today it serves as a place of worship for the Roman Catholic parish of Budry in the diocese of Ełk .
Geographical location
Budry is located in the northeast of the Polish Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship on Voivodeship Road DW 650 (former German Reichsstraße 136 ), which connects the district towns of Gołdap ( German Goldap ) and Węgorzewo (Angerburg) and to Stara Różanka (Alt Rosenthal) at the gates of the city Kętrzyn (Rastenburg) leads. There is no train connection.
The church is in the middle of the village at ul. Marii Konopnickiej.
Church building
Already in 1724 there were plans to build a Protestant church in Buddern. However, the project could only be realized in 1738 and 1739, when a building made of plastered field stones was built.
The wooden tower on the church, built at the same time for the bells, had to be demolished in 1882. In its place there was a massive tower in front of the church .
The interior of the church has a flat roof and originally had two lateral galleries . The altar and pulpit are simple carvings . In 1799 the church received an organ that was made by the master organ builder Nippert from Insterburg (today : Chernyachovsk in Russian ). The ringing initially consisted of three bells.
The building suffered severe damage during the First World War and could only be restored in the first few years after the war.
In the 1950s, numerous restoration work was carried out on the church, while the furnishings of the liturgy of the Roman Catholic Church were adapted. The Catholic parish is now the owner of the house of God which it dedicated to the Holy Trinity .
Parish
In 1739 Buddern became a church village ; until then it belonged to the parish of the church in Engelstein ( Polish Węgielsztyn ). In the founding year, a pastor's office was created, which replaced the second official office in Engelstein. In 1925 the parish of Buddern had 4,450 parishioners. They lived in a large parish comprising almost 40 towns and places. Until 1945 the parish of Buddern belonged to the parish of Angerburg in the church province of East Prussia of the Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union . After 1945, flight and expulsion of the predominantly Protestant population made church life no longer possible.
Increasingly, however, were settled by Polish citizens who were mostly Roman Catholic denominations. If the Catholics belonged to the parish church of the Good Shepherd in Angerburg before 1945 , they now took over the previously evangelical church in the place now called Budry and made it their parish church. The resulting parish is part of the deanery Węgorzewo in the diocese of Ełk (Lyck) of the Roman Catholic Church in Poland . Living in Budry few evangelical church members now belong to the parish in Węgorzewo, a filial community of the parish Giżycko (Giżycko) in the Diocese Mazury the Evangelical Augsburg Church in Poland .
Ev. Parish (until 1945)
In addition to the parish, 38 towns, villages and places to live belonged to the Protestant parish of Buddern until 1945:
Surname | Polish name | Surname | Polish name | |
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Amalienhof | Bogumiły | Klein Sawadden 1938–1945 Buttenhof |
Zawady Małe | |
* Amwalde | Skaliszki | Small subsidence | Sąkieły Małe | |
* Brosowken 1938–1945 Birkenhöhe |
Brzozówko | * Krzywinsken 1927–1945 Sonnheim |
Krzywińskie | |
Brosowkenberg 1938–1945 Birkenstein |
Brzozowska Góra | * Lindenwiese until 1923 Klein Pillacken |
Piłacki Małe | |
* Dowiat | Dowiaty | Arrow (forest) | Strzała | |
Freyhof | Wola |
Pietrellen 1938–1945 Treugenfließ |
Pietrele | |
Friedrichsfelde | Gnaty | Pilsach | ||
Grenzhöfchen | * Popiollen 1938–1945 Albrechtswiesen |
Popioły | ||
Gronden | Grądy Węgorzewskie | Black stone | Czernica | |
Grondischken | Grądyszki | Senft (forest) | ||
Big Budschen | Budzewo | * Sobiechen 1938–1945 Salpen |
Sobiechy | |
Great Sawadden | Steinorter meadow house | |||
Green fields | Rozia | Stollberg Wiesenh. | ||
Grünhöfchen | Zbytki | Forest peace | ||
Jurgutschen 1938–1945 at Jürgenshof |
Jurgucie | Waldhof | Kaczorowo | |
Karlsfelde | Radziszewo | * Wenzken | Więcki | |
Karlshof | Droglewo | Meadow green | ||
Little Budschen | Wilhelmshöh | Koźlak |
Catholic parish (since 1945)
In addition to the parish, ten villages belong to the Parafia Budry:
Surname | German name | Surname | German name | |
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Brzozówko |
Brosowken 1938–1945 Birkenhöhe |
Pietrele |
Pietrellen 1938–1945 Treugenfließ |
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Budzewo | Big Budschen | Piłaki Małe |
Lindenwiese until 1923 Klein Pillacken |
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Dowiaty | Dowiats | Popioły | Popiollen | |
Grądy Węgorzewskie | Gronden | Sobiechy |
Sobiechen 1938–1945 Salpen |
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Grądyszki | Grondischken | Więcki | Wenzken |
Pastor (until 1945)
From the founding of the Buddern parish in 1739 to the expulsion in 1945, the following ministered Protestant clergy in Buddern:
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Church records
The church register documents of the Protestant parish in Buddern have been preserved and are being kept at the German Central Office for Genealogy in Leipzig :
- Baptisms: 1834-1873
- Weddings: 1834 to 1873
- Burials: 1834-1873.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Parafia Budry ( Memento of the original from February 15, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ^ A b Walther Hubatsch : History of the Protestant Church in East Prussia , Volume 2 Pictures of East Prussian Churches. Göttingen 1968, p. 87.
- ^ A b Walther Hubatsch: History of the Protestant Church in East Prussia , Volume 3 documents. Göttingen 1968, p. 476.
- ↑ a b Friedwald Moeller: Old Prussian Evangelical Pastors' Book from the Reformation to the Expulsion in 1945. Hamburg 1968, p. 26.
- ↑ The * indicates a school location.