Johanniterkirche

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The list of St. John's churches is an overview of the church buildings that were built and maintained by the St. Johns after their foundation in 1099, mostly linked to the respective commandery or coming .

The first St. John's Church on German soil was built by the Order of St. John , founded in 1154, in front of the walls of the city of Duisburg, the Duisburg St. Mary's Church . The church has been Protestant since the 16th century.

In Mailberg in Austria, the order has the oldest possession in the world, but the St. John's Church there and today's parish church dates from the 13th century.

Overview

The list is arranged alphabetically by location and can be sorted. Basically the church buildings are included, for which there is already a lemma in Wikipedia . Where this is not the case, an attempt was made to include some information about the relevant place of worship under comments .

Explanation of symbols:

Gl: Faith: ev. = Evangelical ; rk. = Roman Catholic ; o = orthodox; a = other dir.
Church names in italics : the churches no longer exist or have been de-dedicated

Germany

state City or
district
Church name Eq Remarks
Hesse Frankfurt am Main Johanniterkirche possibly The church building stood from around 1340 to the 1880s.
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Groß Eichsen , part of the municipality of Mühlen Eichsen Johanniter Church Groß Eichsen possibly 14th Century
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Kraak, part of the municipality of Rastow Johanniterkirche (Kraak) possibly 14th Century
Rhineland-Palatinate Kronenburg Johanniterkirche (Kronenburg) possibly First mentioned in 1508; however, the parish is called St. Johann Baptist
North Rhine-Westphalia Marienhagen Johanniterkirche (Marienhagen) possibly Tower from the 13th century
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Mirow Mirow Castle Church possibly 14th Century
Hesse Rüdigheim (Neuberg) Johanniterkirche (Rüdigheim) first church in 1235, handed over to Johanniter in 1257; a Romanesque-early Gothic hall church with a pointed slender turret as a roof turret
Baden-Württemberg Schwäbisch Hall Johanniterkirche (Schwäbisch Hall) around 1190, first documented mention in 1298, profaned in 1812, since the end of the 20th century art museum

From 2007 to 2013 completely rebuilt according to the architect's design and expanded with a glass entrance area

Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Sülstorf Johanniterkirche (Sülstorf) possibly 1217
Baden-Württemberg Villingen-Schwenningen , Villingen district Johanniterkirche (Villingen-Schwenningen) possibly
Baden-Württemberg Wölchingen Johanniterkirche (Wölchingen) possibly probably built by Johanniter in 1220; Rededicated as a Protestant parish church at the end of the 20th century

Austria and Switzerland

State
/ Canton
City or
district
Church name Eq Remarks
Vorarlberg Feldkirch Johanniterkirche (Feldkirch) 13th Century
Basel Basel Johanniterkirche Mentioned in an archive together with a Johanniterhaus in 1775

literature

  • Eberhard Grunsky: Double-storey Johanniter churches and related buildings , Tübingen 1970.

See also

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Website of the Marienkirche in Duisburg
  2. Website for the Johanniterkirche Kronenburg
  3. Photos of the church in Rüdigheim on fotocommunity.de ; accessed on February 2, 2016.
  4. Reconstruction and expansion of the Johanniterkirche / Kunsthalle Würth, Old Masters in the Würth Collection ( Memento of the original dated February 2, 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. , accessed February 2, 2016.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.akbw.de
  5. Boxberg-Wölchingen: Former Johanniterkirche (brochure) on www.amazon.de
  6. State Archives Switzerland> Basel> see Building No.99 , accessed on 2 February 2016th