Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller

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Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller

Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller (born February 16, 1815 in Papenbruch , † October 19, 1897 in Wittstock / Dosse ) was a German organ builder .

Life

Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller was a son of the Protestant pastor Samuel Christoph Abraham Lütkemüller in Papenbruch near Wittstock ( Prignitz ). It was his first pastorate after he had been private secretary to Christoph Martin Wieland in Weimar for almost ten years . In 1829, the young Lütkemüller experienced the construction of an organ by Johann Friedrich Turley in Wildberg near Neuruppin , his father's second pastor. Then he wanted to become an organ builder.

Lütkemüller lived in the northern Brandenburg town of Wittstock from the founding of his workshop in 1844 until his death. In 1845 he married the 21-year-old Laura Marie Juliane Adelheid Tondeur from Berlin, daughter of a royal captain of Huguenot descent. His son Johannes, born in 1846, initially worked in his father's workshop. B. mentioned in 1866 when the Sietower organ was built. He died in 1919 as a veterinary councilor in Rostock. Daughter Anna, born in 1848, died after two years. Daughter Adelaide was born in 1849, daughter Clara in 1853, daughter Hedwig in 1854, who died after five years and in 1856 daughter Marie, who remained single.

Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller died on October 19, 1897 in Wittstock, his widow Laura eight years later also in Wittstock.

Training and wandering

FHLütkemüller (signature) .jpg

From 1830 to 1833 Lütkemüller completed an apprenticeship with the then 26-year-old Johann Friedrich Turley in Treuenbrietzen . Extracts from his autobiography (1869):

“In 1829, an organ was installed in Wildburg near Neuruppin by Friedrich Thurley from Treuenbritzen [!]. He and an assistant found a hospitable reception in my parents' home. I, at home as a Tertian during the Michaelmas holidays, was interested in organ building. Thurley wanted to notice special arrangements for organ building in me and persuaded my parents to teach me to him. And since the circumstances prevented my parents from letting both sons study at the same time, I was seriously asked at the end whether I would also like to learn the art of organ building. After careful consideration and prayer, I made the joyful decision to make a sacrifice to my parents and gladly withdrew from my studies. "

“I started my apprenticeship in March 1830. After three years I was made an assistant, but volunteered to work as an assistant for the fourth year for free in order to provide my principal with compensation for the apprenticeship. "

Then Lütkemüller went on a hike. First he made a stop at Carl August Buchholz in Berlin , whose order books at the time made a long stay impossible. After a few weeks with Gottlieb Heise in Potsdam , at the end of 1834 he came to Eberhard Friedrich Walcker in Ludwigsburg , whose good reputation already extended beyond the state border of Württemberg. Walcker was the most innovative organ builder in Germany and the destination of many traveling organ builders. In 1837 Lütkemüller went back home for a year to do his military service in Erfurt and Neuruppin. He then went back to Ludwigsburg to work at Walcker for another five years.

There he achieved masterly skills and was able to represent Walcker, who was absent for several months, in the management of the construction of the organs for the church in St. Petersburg (1838-1840) and the Olaikirche in Reval (1840-1842). Extracts from his autobiography (1869):

“During the training of the two large plants for St. Petersburg and Reval, my training progressed more and more, so that during an eight-month absence from Walcker I could be entrusted with the management completely independently. Intonation and tuning of the Revaler organ was already my work. To set up the organ for the S. Olai Church in Reval , I went to Reval with three other assistants in addition to Mr. Walcker. The organ in the Olaikirche and an eight-legged work in the country were installed in four months. I also played another organ in Reval, which had been repaired by a local organ builder Tanton and for which work we had brought various new registers and which allowed me to do the whole tuning because I could do it more safely and better than him. "

Own workshop and organ building

Lütkemüller nameplate from 1858 on the organ in Groß Gievitz

Through a message from his mother in 1843, Lütkemüller learned of the renovation of the church in Wittstock and the construction of an organ. He finished his work in Ludwigsburg, went to his homeland and in August 1843 submitted his offer for a new organ to the Wittstock magistrate. In January 1844 he received the contract to build a three-manual organ with 44 sounding parts. On July 26, 1846, the instrument was revised and approved.

For this major order, he founded his own company in Wittstock in 1844. In 1848 he bought a building near the train station at Eisenbahnstrasse 5, which he lived in and next to which he built his workshop. How many employees worked for him is not known.

The impressions and experiences of his stays with Buchholz and Walcker are already visible on his first organs. From Buchholz he took a look at the metal pipe production with the very good tin work. For organs with multiple manuals, like Walcker, he built free-standing gaming tables facing the altar. In addition to a few three- and two-manual organs, Lutkemüller mainly built single-manual instruments with mechanical slide chests. In 1850 he noted:

"My business, which has been doing so well according to modest demands, is very poor in terms of new orders and I am not looking to the future without worry."

In 1869 Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller wrote in his autobiography:

“And so by God's grace I have delivered organs of various sizes up to the number 109, including the Alt-Röbler organ with 24 voices, Waren 22, Sandau 22, Tangermünde St. Stephan with 32, Gnoyen with 24, Seehausen / Altmark 44 and Güstrow cathedral organ with 37 voices. In addition to a large number of 6-10-12 registers in the country. What will now continue is in God's hands. Whether I am allowed to create larger works, or whether I should continue to create small works for country churches. "

The best-known student was Albert Hollenbach , who learned and worked at Lütkemüller for six years. He started his own business in Neuruppin in 1878. From the company's foundation in 1844 until his death in 1897, Lütkemüller worked in northwest Brandenburg , in Mecklenburg and in the Prussian province of Saxony . His work is estimated to have about 200 new organs.

He is also the inventor of a double action mechanism, for which he received a patent in 1880. The prototype of this so-called patent organ was only built twice and has been in Marwitz near Velten since 1863 and has been preserved. The patent organ built in Sydow in 1882 is no longer preserved.

On February 11, 1894, the Leipziger Zeitschrift für Instrumentenbau can read:

“It should be of interest to the professional circles that the organ builder Mr. Lüdkemüller from Wittstock in Mecklenburg recently celebrated his 50th anniversary as a master with great ardor. Despite his age, his workforce has not yet waned. This old master still works with the same skill today, travels in his high seventies to revise the organ works under his control and will soon be completing four organs again. "

List of works (selection)

Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller built numerous organs, especially in the northern Mark Brandenburg , but also in Mecklenburg and other places. Around 140 instruments have survived in Germany in larger or smaller parts. Organs that are no longer available are in italics .

New organs

year opus place church image Manuals register Remarks
1838-1840 without St. Petersburg St. Petri Collaboration with EF Walcker , destroyed around 1934
1840-1842 without Reval , now Tallinn, Estonia Olaikirche
Iglesia de San Olaf, Tallinn, Estonia, 2012-08-05, DD 12.JPG
Collaboration with EF Walcker (op. 34), independent intonation and tuning - organ
1842 without Location at Reval Village church I. 8th? Installation of an eight-footed Walcker organ
1844 1 Koenigsberg near Wittstock Ev. church I / P 8th receive
1844-1846 2 Wittstock / Dosse St. Mary Ev.  St. Mary's Church III / P 44 Damaged by central heating in the church since 1927, 1935 new building by Schuke in the Lütkemüller housing and with some pipes, many pipes stolen in 1945, restored
1847 Spots Zechlin Ev. church I / P 11 replaced in 1903 by Albert Hollenbach
1847 Pollitz, Altmark Village church I / P 9 later major modifications
1848 Rhinow City Church I / P 11 1907 new building by Schuke with pipes and in housing by Lütkemüller (II / P, 17), 2002 general overhaul
1848 Retzow near Nauen Village church I / P 8th later conversions
1848 Kriele at Friesack Village church I / p 6th later major modifications
1848 Gülpe near Rhinow Village church I / p 6th receive
1850 Kraatz near Gransee Village church I / p 6th receive
1850 Kötzlin near Kyritz Village church I / p 6th receive
1852 Barsikow, Prignitz Village church I / p 6th later rebuilt
1852 Bendelin near Havelberg Village church I / P 8th receive
1852 Schönermark near Gransee Village church I / p 6th receive
1853 Damelack near Havelberg Village church I / p 6th later rebuilt
1853 Garz at Fehrbellin's Village church I / p 8th receive
1853 Löwenberg near Oranienburg church I / p 8th later changed
1853-1855 Satow , Mecklenburg Village church I / p 6th 1998 general overhaul by Joachim Euler, 2008 restoration by Mecklenburg Organ Builders
1853 Relay at Kremmen Village church I / p 4th later rebuilt
1854 Putlitz City parish church of St. Nikolai I / P 10 650 Thaler sum insured at that time; later rebuilt, repaired in a first section in 2012
1854 Wansdorf near Velten Village church I / P 7th receive
1854 Ludorf Village church I. 4th without pedal, restoration 2005 by Tobias Schramm
1855 Gottberg near Neuruppin Village church I / P 8th later transferred to Lüchfeld, received
1855 Quitzöbel near Havelberg Village church I / P 8th receive
1856 Wittstock Holy Spirit Church I / p 6th 1956 to Gadow to I / P, 7, transferred to the Mecklenburg Organ Museum in Malchow in 2001 , restored. 2013 back to Gadow.
1856 Stechow near Rathenow Village church I / P 7th later rebuilt
1856 Waren , Mecklenburg George Church
24 goods 002.jpg
II / P 22nd later conversions to II / P, 26
1856 Wuthenow Schinkel Church Schinkel Church I / p 6th receive
1856 Radensleben Village church Radensleben Church Organ (1) .jpg I / P 8th in case by Christian Kreynow from Neustadt / Dosse (1709)
1857 Nechlin near Rathenow Village church I / P 8th receive
1857 Bechlin at Neuruppin Village church I / p 12 Restored in 1957, restored again by Matthias Beckmann in 2019
1858 Rüthnick Village church Costs at that time 600 thalers; only fragments preserved.
1858 Jabel Village church I / p 6th 2000 General overhaul by Friedrich Drese and Uwe Sodemann
1858 Great Gievitz Village church
Groß Gievitz village church
I / P 7th later rebuilt, preserved
1858 Badingen near Gransee Village church I / p 8th receive
1858 Buckow Village church I / P 8th receive
1858 Lögow near Wusterhausen Village church I / p 6th later rebuilt
1859 Gnoien , Mecklenburg Marienkirche
Marienkirche
II / P 24 Rebuilt in 1891 by Lütkemüller himself; Restoration in 2004 by Schuke
1859 Groß Methling near Dargun , Mecklenburg Village church I / P 7th 1892 Relocation to the newly built church
1859 Steckelsdorf near Rathenow Village church
Rathenow-Steckelsdorf-DorfkircheOrgel1-Asio.jpg
I / P 8th receive
1859 Woosten Village church Village church I / P 7th Restoration in 2016 by Gottfried Schmidt → Organ
1859 Big show at Rhinow Village church I / P 8th receive
1860 Dargun , Mecklenburg City Church I / P 10 receive
1860 Church of Grubenhagen Village church Church of Grubenhagen I / P 10 2009 Restoration by Mecklenburg Organ Builders
1860 Wredenhagen , Mecklenburg Village church Wredenhagen Church I / P 10 receive
1860/1861 Teetz at Kyritz Village church I / P 8th The organ was used from 1999 to 2010 in the Nikolaikirche (Berlin) as a concert organ, and was rebuilt in Teetz in 2010. → organ
1861 Kessin , Mecklenburg St. Godehard II / P 11 Completion of the organ started in 1858 by Heinrich Rasche from 1858, which he had to give up due to age
1861 Stavenhagen , Mecklenburg City Church II / P 11 2009 to 2011 technical restoration and reconstruction by Mecklenburg Organ Builders
1861 Rohlsdorf near Perleberg Village church I / P 7th receive
1861 Black wood near Havelberg Village church I / P 9 receive
1862 Demerthin at Kyritz Village church I / P 7th receive
1862 Garz at Groß Welle Village church I / P 7th
1862 Krampfer at Perleberg Village church I / P 7th receive
1862 Kuhz, Uckermark Village church I / P 7th restored
1862 Tacking at Putlitz Village church I / P 7th receive
1862 Volkenshagen Village church I / P 9 Reconstruction in 1930 by Christian Börger, general overhaul in 2005 by Mecklenburg Organ Builders
1862 Vilz Village church I / P 7th
1863 Marwitz Village church I / P 11 Patent organ
1863 Behren-Lübchin Village church I / P 7th
1863 Groß Dratow near goods Village church I / P 7th
1863 Klein Gottschow near Perleberg Village church I / P 7th
1863 Haßleben , Uckermark Village church I / P 8th partially preserved
1864 Borgfeld Village church I / P 7th In 1979 it was moved to the Marienkapelle in the town church in Malchin
1864 Gulow Village church I / P 7th
1864 Great Lüben Village church I / P 7th implemented according to Klein Lüben
1864 Stölln near Rhinow Village church Organ of the church in Stölln I / P 8th For the installation of the organ, the ceiling of the village church was raised a little in 1864, restoration by Wolter in 1993.
1865 Manker at Fehrbellin Village church I / P 10 five-part prospectus
1865 Brudersdorf, Mecklenburg Village church I / P 9 2009 restoration
1865 Vipperow , Mecklenburg Village church I / P 7th 2010 General overhaul by Mecklenburg Organ Builders
1865 Brunne at Fehrbellin's Village church Repaired by Albert Hollenbach in 1893
1865 Wulkau near Havelberg Village church I / P 11 receive
1866 Sietow , Mecklenburg Village church I / P 9
1866 Wasdow , Mecklenburg Village church I. 3 (4) Restoration 2001 by Mecklenburg Organ Builders
1867 100 Seehausen , Altmark St. Petri (Seehausen) Organ St. Petri (Seehausen) III / P 44 Lütkemüller's largest preserved organ and the only one with a swell, the largest organ in the Altmark; 1999–2014 restored by Schuke
1868 103 Guestrow Dom
Güstrow Cathedral Organ.jpg
III / P 37 1984–1986 restoration by Jehmlich organ
1868 Giesendorf, Prignitz Village church I / P 7th receive
1868 Grabow, Prignitz Village church I / P 7th receive
1868 Zaatzke Village church I / p 6th receive
1868 Zempow Village church I / P 9 receive
1869 Germendorf near Oranienburg Village church I / P 9 receive
1869 Hohen Wangelin , Mecklenburg Village church I / P 7th Prospect pipes taken from Grubenhagen Church in 2009
1869 Stöffin at Neuruppin Village church I / p 5 receive
1869 Glienike at Wittstock Village church I. 4th receive
1869 Jabel Village church I. 4th receive
1869 Kuhlhausen near Havelberg Village church I / P 8th receive
1869 Warnau near Havelberg Village church I / P 8th receive
1870 Poppentine Village church Church organ in Poppentin I / P 7th receive
1871 Old Schwerin Village church I / AP 4th 1945 totally demolished, 1995 replacement by a Friese (III) organ from Boitin
1871 Brunow , Mecklenburg Village church I / P 7th 1999 General repairs by Mecklenburg Organ Builders
1871 Garz near Havelberg Village church
Lütkemüller organ Garz.jpg
I / P 8th receive
1872 Kirch Kogel , Mecklenburg Village church I / P 7th restored
1873 Klaushagen near Boitzenburg, Uckermark Village church I / P 7th restored
1873 Sülten , Mecklenburg Village church I / P 8th 1908 Rearrangement by Carl Börger
1874 Falkenau near Spandau Village church I / P 10 moved to Niedernjesa near Göttingen, the only Lütkemüller organ in Lower Saxony
1874 Seeburg near Spandau Village church I / P 7th receive
1874 Holzhausen near Kyritz Village church I / p 6th receive
1874 Ruest , Mecklenburg Village church I / P 7th not playable, pipes damaged
1874 Ankershagen Village church I / P 8th 1996 Restoration by Orgelbau Hüfken
1875 Mountains near Havelberg Village church I / P 8th receive
1875 Beveringen near Pritzwalk Village church I / P 7th receive
1875 Lexow , Mecklenburg Village church I / - 3 Repair in 1992 by Wolfgang Nussbücker
1876 Bantikow near Wusterhausen Village church I / p 6th receive
1876 Groß Gottschow near Perleberg Village church I / P 8th receive
1876 Kletzke at Wilsnack Village church II / P 11 receive
1877 Lennewitz at Wilsnack Village church I / P 7th receive
1877 Glöwen near Havelberg Village church I / P 9 receive
1877 Sergleben near Perleberg Village church I / P 7th receive
1877 Vehlow at Kyritz Village church I / P 7th receive
1877 Bornsdorf near Luckau, Lower Lusatia Village church I / P 7th receive
around 1877? Rückersdorf near Finsterwalde, Niederlausitz Village church I / P 7th Year of construction unknown, around 1877 two more works in Niederlausitz have been preserved
1878 Abbendorf near Wilsnack Village church I / P 7th receive
1878 Kampehl near Neustadt / Dosse Village church I / p 6th receive
1878 Kolrep near Kyritz Village church I / P 7th receive
1878 Postlin near Perleberg Village church I / P 9 receive
1878 Raduhn , Neumark, now Raduń Village church I / P 7th in poor condition or no longer received
around 1878 Senzke at Friesack Village church I / P 7th Remains received
around 1878 Neuendorf near Altentreptow, Western Pomerania Village church I / p 4th receive
1879 Spaatz near Rhinow Village church I / P 7th receive
1880 Garlin near Perleberg Village church I / P 7th later rebuilt
1881 Lohmen , Mecklenburg Lohmen village church Organ of the church in Lohmen I / P 12 Restoration in 1994 by Dirk Steinecke
1882 Zühlsdorf Village church preserved but not playable
1882 Mesendorf Village church Organ of the church in Mesendorf implemented in the Mecklenburg Organ Museum in Malchow.
1883 Pinnow (Uckermark) Village church I / P 9
1884 Klosterfelde , Barnim Village church I / P 7th received restored
1885 Wagenitz Village church
1888 Bröllin (Uckermark) Village church I / P 6th received, neo-Gothic prospect
1890 Never long Village church
1890 Gutow Badendiek village church I / P 6th Implementation on the altar square and restoration in 1999 by Andreas Arnold (Plau am See)
1890 Siggelkow Redlin village church I / P 7th
1890 Danewitz Village church I / P 10 1982 Relocation to the village church in Berlin-Karow, original preserved. organ
1891 Sülstorf Sülte village church I. 4th 1891 installation in Kraak, 1893 west gallery Sülte, 2004 restoration by Andreas Arnold (Plau am See) with implementation in the nave
1892 Rastow Kraak village church I / P 7th Repair 2000 by Heinz Hoffmann, Hamburg
1892 Dierberg Village church
1893 Massow Massow village church I. 4th Repair in 1985 by Hans Raatz
1896 Large linden tree Village church 1992 comprehensive repairs
1896/97 Basdorf Village church I / p 6th receive

More work

year place church image Manuals register Remarks
1851 Advertise , Altmark St. Johannis Reconstruction of the Wagner organ
1853 Röbel , Mecklenburg St. Mary II / P 24 Reconstruction, restoration 2003–2004 by Schuke
1854 Havelberg City Church modification
1858 Tangermünde St. Stephan extensive renovation of the Scherer organ
1860 Havelberg Dom modification
1865 Brunne near Neuruppin Village church modification
1872 Wusterhausen St. Peter and Paul Reconstruction of the Wagner organ
1873 Luckau St. Nikolai Reconstruction of the Donat organ
1875 Throwing up at Friesack Village church modification
1888 Rühstädt Village church Reconstruction of the Wagner organ
circa 1850 Zollchow Village church modification

literature

  • Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller: Patent No. 11708, “Equipment on organs to play two manuals using a keyboard”. Patent from March 9, 1880, issued December 17, 1880.
  • Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller: The patent organ from Lütkemüller , in: Die Orgel- und Pianobau-Zeitung, 3, 1881, p. 83 f.
  • Uwe Pape : The organ in Marwitz - a "two-manual organ with a keyboard" by Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller. In: Ars Organi , 36, 1988, pp. 83-92.
  • Uwe Pape: Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller, Wittstock . In: Acta Organologica , Volume 26, 1998, pp. 289-318.
  • Uwe Pape: Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller . Berlin 2001 (2nd edition), 347 pp.
  • Friedrich Drese : Lütkemüller. Organs in the Müritz district. Röbel / Müritz 2000.
  • Friedrich Drese: The organ builder Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller and his work in Mecklenburg. Malchow 2010.

swell

Unprinted sources

  • State Main Archive Schwerin
    • LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Provincial Monastery / Monastery Office Dobbertin
    • LHAS 5.11-2 Landtag negotiations , Landtag assemblies , Landtag minutes and Landtag committee.
  • State Church Archive Schwerin
    • Oberkirchenrat

Web links

Commons : Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Autobiography: Copy owned by Schuke Orgelbau Potsdam.
  2. ^ Friedrich Drese: The organ builder Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller and his work in Mecklenburg. 2010 p. 6
  3. ^ Friedrich Drese: The organ builder Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller and his work in Mecklenburg. 2010 p. 7.
  4. Uwe Pape: North German organ builders and their works. 2001 p. 38.
  5. Rectory Pritzwalk, Pw 361/311 13 November 1850th
  6. Catalog raisonné of the Lütkemüller Society, with 159 new buildings and conversions preserved, organ list Orgeldatabase, with 147 existing and former organs (Dutch)
  7. organ in Konigsberg organ Index
  8. Ulrike Schwarz, Matthias Metzler and others: Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Brandenburg, Ostprignitz-Ruppin district, part 2: Fehrbellin community, Lindow (Mark) office and the city of Rheinsberg. Wernersche Verlagsgesellschaft, Worms am Rhein 2003, ISBN 3-88462-191-2 , p. 228.
  9. ^ City church Rhinow Westhavelland, with photo
  10. ^ Organ in Satow , Mecklenburgisches Orgelmuseum.
  11. ^ Organ in Ludorf , Malchow Organ Museum.
  12. ^ Organ in Gadow , Malchow Organ Museum.
  13. ^ Organ in Wittstock , Orgeldatabase (Dutch).
  14. ^ Bulletin "Old Churches". The organ sounds again for the church jubilee. Archived from the original on May 4, 2014 ; Retrieved May 4, 2014 .
  15. ^ Organ in Waren , Malchow Organ Museum.
  16. ^ Rainer Fellenberg: The Schinkel Church - organ . In: Schinkelkirche zu Wuthenow . Evangelical local parish Wuthenow in the overall parish of Ruppin. April 25, 2010. Retrieved May 13, 2010.
  17. Planning of the Bechlin restoration
  18. ^ Organ in Jabel , Malchow Organ Museum.
  19. ^ Organ in Groß Gievitz , Malchow Organ Museum.
  20. ^ Georg Dehio : Handbook of German Art Monuments . Revised by the Dehio Association and the Association of State Monument Preservators in the Federal Republic of Germany, edited by Gerhard Vinken and others. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich / Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-422-03123-4 , p. 172.
  21. ^ Organ in Gnoien , Malchow Organ Museum.
  22. ^ Organ in Groß Methling , Malchow Organ Museum.
  23. ^ Organ in Woosten , Malchow Organ Museum.
  24. ^ Organ in Dargun , Malchow Organ Museum.
  25. ^ Organ in Dargun , Orgeldatabase (Dutch).
  26. ^ Organ in Kirch Grubenhagen , Malchow Organ Museum.
  27. ^ Organ in Wredenhagen , Malchow Organ Museum.
  28. Claudia Seiring: The organ is returning home. In: Ruppiner Anzeiger from October 7, 2010.
  29. ^ Organ in Kessin , Malchow Organ Museum.
  30. ^ Organ in Stavenhagen , Malchow Organ Museum.
  31. ^ Hannes Ludwig: Organ manual Brandenburg. Volume 1. Uckermark (western part) . Freimut und Selbst, Berlin 2005, p. 96
  32. ^ Organ in Volkenshagen , Malchow Organ Museum.
  33. ^ Organ in Vilz , Malchow Organ Museum.
  34. ^ Organ in Behren-Lübchin , Malchow Organ Museum.
  35. Organ in Behren-Lübchin , Orgbase (Dutch).
  36. ^ Organ in Groß Dratow , Malchow Organ Museum.
  37. ^ Organ in Malchin , Malchow Organ Museum.
  38. organ in Stölln , organ index.
  39. ^ Westhavelland art monuments of the province of Brandenburg. 1913.
  40. Ulrike Schwarz, Matthias Metzler and others: Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Brandenburg, Ostprignitz-Ruppin district, part 2: Fehrbellin community, Lindow (Mark) office and the city of Rheinsberg. Wernersche Verlagsgesellschaft, Worms am Rhein 2003, ISBN 3-88462-191-2 , p. 334.
  41. ^ Organ in Brudersdorf , Malchow Organ Museum.
  42. ^ Organ in Vipperow Organ Museum Malchow
  43. ^ Organ in Sietow , Malchow Organ Museum.
  44. ^ Organ in Wasdow , Malchow Organ Museum.
  45. ^ Organ in Seehausen , Schuke Orgelbau, with history and disposition.
  46. A historical moment Altmark Zeitung from August 27, 2014, about restoration work.
  47. ^ Organ in Güstrow , Malchow Organ Museum.
  48. ^ Organ in Hohen Wangelin , Malchow Organ Museum.
  49. ^ Organ in Poppentin , Malchow Organ Museum.
  50. ^ Organ in Brunow , Malchow Organ Museum.
  51. ^ Organ in Kirch Kogel , Malchow Organ Museum.
  52. ^ Church to Kirch Kogel ( de ) In: Kirchgemeinde Lohmen . Retrieved December 28, 2010.
  53. Hannes Ludwig: Organ Manual Brandenburg Volume 1. Uckermark (western part) . Freimut & Selbst, Berlin 2005.
  54. ^ Organ in Sülten , Malchow Organ Museum.
  55. ^ Organ in Ruest , Malchow Organ Museum.
  56. ^ Organ in Ankershagen , Malchow Organ Museum.
  57. ^ Organ in Lexow , Malchow Organ Museum.
  58. no articles in Polish organ databases Musicam Sacram and Wirtualne Centrum Organowe
  59. ^ Organ in Lohmen , Malchow Organ Museum.
  60. ^ Organ Orgelmuseum Malchow.
  61. Organ in Pinnow Organ Index (restricted access)
  62. ^ Organ Institute for Organ Research Brandenburg
  63. ^ Organ in Badendiek , Malchow Organ Museum.
  64. ^ Organ in Siggelkow , Malchow Organ Museum.
  65. ^ Church of Groß Linde, Prignitz Church District
  66. ^ Organ Institute for Organ Research Brandenburg