Evangelical Church Hasel
The Evangelical Church Hasel is a parish church built in the 1780s in Hasel in the southern Black Forest . A first church in Hasel was mentioned in a document in the 14th century.
history
Predecessor church of St. Peter
A pastor is documented in Hasel ("plebanus in Hasela") in 1275; the church ("ecclesia Hasel") is mentioned between 1360 and 1370. The patronage (St. Peter) mentioned in 1496 and the age of the place - first mentioned in a document from the St. Gallen monastery in 820 - suggest that the church could possibly have existed in Franconian times.
A sandstone plaque, which is still preserved in today's tower, points to the one renovation in 1511. The bell tower in the east only slightly towered over the nave. In 1724 the church received a roof turret . Due to the lack of space, galleries were built so close to the pulpit that visitors on the gallery and the pastor on the pulpit could literally "reach and get to each other". In 1773 they were forced to apply for a new building due to the limited space available.
Today's church
As early as 1775, the congregation was considering building the new church in a more suitable location. The design for the new church comes from the state master builder Carl Friedrich Meerwein ; however, it was probably built according to other plans. After the foundation stone was laid in 1779, the consecration took place in 1781.
A Teutonic Cross on the arched tower portal next to the carved date of the laying of the foundation stone reminds of the obligation to build the Teutonic Order House in Beuggen , which existed from the 14th to the 16th century. Repair work was already due in 1786, further repairs will follow in 1852, 1901, 1921 and after the end of the Second World War .
description
Church building
The church in Hasel consists of a rectangular gable roof covered hall and a two-storey bell tower attached to the south . The tower has arched sound arcades on the upper floor , including a clock face of the tower clock. The spire is formed by a pyramid roof bent in the lower third , which is crowned by a tower ball .
To the west of the church is the Hasel cemetery. The iron entrance portal on the church tower is a memorial for those who fell in both world wars.
Interior and outfit
The nave is drawn in over a flat roof and is surrounded on its west side by a gallery resting on three wooden columns . The main entrance to the bell tower leads from the tower hall into the main building. Another access is via the western side portal.
On the south wall there is a simple wooden celebration altar with a large cross behind it. To the left of the altar is a pulpit , to the right a baptismal font . The altar area is slightly raised to the rest of the nave on a small pedestal.
Bells and organ
The three-part bronze bell of the Hasler church is composed as follows:
Surname | Chime | Casting year | foundry |
---|---|---|---|
Baptismal bell | a ′ | 1959 | Bachert bell foundry |
Medium bell | cis ′ ′ | 1957 | Bachert bell foundry |
Little bell | e ′ ′ | 1957 | Bachert bell foundry |
The organ from 1934 was built by the Link brothers from Heidenheim an der Brenz. The instrument with cone chest and pneumatic action has two manuals , a pedal and 13 stops .
literature
- Johannes Helm : Churches and chapels in the Markgräflerland , Müllheim / Baden 1989, ISBN 3-921709-16-4 , pp. 120–121.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ W. Haid: Liber decimationis cleri Constanciensis per Papa de anno 1275 . In: FDA 1, 1865, p. 200
- ^ W. Haid: Liber marcarum in diocessi Constanciensi . In: FDA 5, 1870, p. 86
- ^ H. Weidner: History of Hasel and Glashütten , 1933, p. 104; 113
- ^ Helm: Churches and chapels in the Markgräflerland , p. 120 (01.2)
- ^ H. Weidner: History of Hasel and Glashütten , 1933, p. 113 ff.
- ^ Helm: Churches and chapels in the Markgräflerland , p. 121 (02.2)
Coordinates: 47 ° 39 '12.9 " N , 7 ° 53' 51.4" E