Church on Lisnaberg
The Roman Catholic Church on Lisnaberg / Lisna gora is a pilgrimage church and a branch of the parish of St. Peter am Wallersberg / Št. Peter na Vašinjah. It belongs to the Diocese of Gurk within the deanery Völkermarkt / Velikovec . The church is at 614 high Lisnaberg in the municipality of Ruden .
The church on Lisnaberg is the starting point for the Jauntaler Dreiber run that takes place on Dreinagel Friday .
During the Ascension of Christ, the custom of the raising of Christ takes place in the church.
history
A chapel on Lisnaberg was first mentioned in 1734. The new building was consecrated in 1804 by the Lavanter Bishop Maximilian Firmian . The tower was only completed in 1818, destroyed by fire after a lightning strike in 1971 and rebuilt in 1997.
Building description
The church is a late baroque building with a west tower with an onion helmet and an entrance hall in the west. Stitch cap vaults rise above the nave, the choir and the sacristy annex in the north . The nave is divided into three bays by pilasters and belt arches . The three-axis west gallery with flat groin vaults stands on pillars. A round arched triumphal arch connects the nave and the single -bay choir with a polygonal end. The vault paintings in the choir from 1794 show scenes from the life of the Virgin Mary .
Facility
The baroque high altar was built around 1770/1780. The central shrine contains a Madonna and Child in a halo, the niche in the cafeteria a holy Rosalia . The figures of the peasant saints Isidor and Notburga stand above the sacrificial portals .
The two side altars are from the same period. The left altar panel shows the teaching of Mary , the right the apostle Simon . The church also features a canvas picture of the Enthroned God the Father from the 18th century and a statue of the Man of Sorrows from the first half of the 18th century.
literature
- Anton Schroll: Dehio manual. The art monuments of Austria. Carinthia. Vienna 2001, ISBN 3-7031-0712-X , p. 328.
- Wilhelm Deuer: Jauntaler Kulturwanderungen - An art-historical companion through the Völkermarkt district. Verlag Johannes Heyn, Klagenfurt 2001, ISBN 3-85366-977-8 , p. 150.
Web links
Coordinates: 46 ° 39 ′ 16.5 ″ N , 14 ° 45 ′ 8.7 ″ E