Rönnebeck-Farge Church

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rönnebeck-Farge Church

The Evangelical Reformed community with the Rönnebeck-Farge church is located in Bremen , Blumenthal district, Farge district , Farger Strasse 17-21. The church and the pastor's house were built in 1905 according to plans by August Abbehusen and Otto Blendermann , the parish hall in 1962 according to plans by Schulze-Herringen. The buildings have been a listed building in Bremen since 1995 .

history

Around 1568 to 1580 the Evangelical Reformed Confession prevailed in Bremen and also in Blumenthal, which does not belong to Bremen . The merging of the Reformed and Lutheran Churches in Bremen did not take place until after the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss of 1803 (administrative union from 1873 and Bremen Evangelical Church from 1920). After 1845/1873 the Reformed Confession in Bremen was increasingly lost.
However, Blumenthal and Farge were not incorporated into the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen until 1939 , and the Reformed Confession was retained.

The white church and the pastor's house were built between 1904 and 1905 in the style of the turn of the century with mansard roofs for the Reformed Community of Rönnebeck - Farge not far from the Weser . The short octagonal tower attachment on the pediment has a pointed spire .
The glass painting work comes from the Worpswede artist Georg Karl Rohde .
The bell dates from 1796 from the JP Bartels workshop. Until 1905 it hung in the old tower of the ev.-ref. Church in Blumenthal.
The organ comes from the company Ahrend & Brunzema, built in 1958.
The plaque next to the entrance was created by the Worpswede sculptor Ulrich Conrad.

The one to two-storey, clinkered parish hall with a gable roof and connected to the church is a conservative post-war building from 1962.

Parish Rönnebeck-Farge

The Evangelical Reformed parish of Rönnebeck-Farge is in the Reformed tradition. The community has a day-care center for around 30 children, various circles, etc. a. for women, seniors, guitar playing and ecumenical Bible discussions as well as choirs for men and for singing folk songs. A cemetery belongs to the community. The Bremen writer Manfred Hausmann , who worked as a preacher here, was buried here.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Monument database of the LfD
  2. Fourth ordinance on the rebuilding of the Reich of September 28, 1939

Web links

Coordinates: 53 ° 11 ′ 41.3 "  N , 8 ° 31 ′ 55.9"  E