Church of Fahrenstedt-Böklund

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The Böklunder Church from the south with the exposed, bricked-up south portal

The church of Fahrenstedt in Böklund is located in the district of Fahrenstedt in the municipality of Böklund . The listed hall church from the 13th century is one of the two churches of the parish of Böklund- Uelsby within the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany .

history

The medieval stone church built in the 13th century in Nord-Fahrenstedt at the transition over the Wellspanger Au , which flows out of the Langsee , was probably on the way from Schleswig to the oldest church of the Struxdorfharde , the St. George's Church in Struxdorf . It is no longer known to whom the church was dedicated . Only after the church was built did a town develop around the church. Already in the Middle Ages, the clergy shared the church with the Church of St. James in Uelsby. The freestanding stack of bells dates back to 1595, the bells of which the bell foundry in Apolda created in 1921 ; the bell was operated by hand until 1986.

Around 1600 the beam ceiling in the nave was painted, which was extended to the west in 1623. Building materials were used, including the beams of the roof truss from the Stolk Church, mentioned for the last time in 1523 and demolished at some point in the century afterwards , the parish of which was added to the Böklund parish . The Romanesque tympanum built into the south wall also came from the Stolker Church.

In 1772 the windows on the south wall were enlarged. In 1787 the church was "improved". The medieval choir was removed and the church was extended to the east so that the new organ could be placed on a gallery behind the altar. Further renovations and alterations took place in 1843/1847 and 1863/1864. The plaster ceiling that was drawn in in 1863/64 was removed in 1965, as were the north gallery and baron chair. The last renovation was completed in March 2010. Moisture damage to the roof and wall was removed, the gable wall in the west was renewed, the west portal was enlarged and the old portals in the south and north wall and the window niche in the south wall were exposed.

Furnishing

The oldest piece of equipment is the late Gothic triumphal cross . In 2002, D. Bieber made the assistant figures Maria and Johannes out of paper mache .

Most of the rest of the inventory was donated by the lords of the Clementsen von Gut Fahrenstedt estate. The altar from 1607 is a work from the Ringerink workshop. In the late Renaissance structure there are two coats of arms of the Struxdorfharde (oak leaf, left) and the landlords (water wheel, which symbolizes the mill on the Wellspanger Au). The altarpiece, which shows a crucifixion scene, was painted by E. Ceder in 1763. The carved pulpit, whose five-sided basket shows the birth of Christ, his baptism, crucifixion, resurrection and ascension, probably also comes from the Ringerink workshop. The Low German text tells us that the pulpit was donated from the estate of Clemens Clementsen, who died unmarried in 1604 at the age of 30. The baptism, including the baptismal lid, was also donated by members of the Clementsen family in 1615. The wooden goblet is carried by the four evangelists .

The organ gallery was pulled in in 1787. In 1866/67 Marcussen & Søn built a new organ, which was replaced in the 1960s by an organ made by HO Paschen Orgelbau from Kiel.

literature

  • Art topography Schleswig-Holstein . Neumünster 1969, p. 665
  • Dehio manual . Schleswig-Holstein. Hamburg. 2009, p. 190

Web links

Commons : Kirche zu Fahrenstedt-Böklund  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Church in Fahrenstedt in Böklund
  2. Hans Nicolai Andreas Jensen : Attempt at church statistics of the Duchy of Schleswig: Containing the provosts of Flensburg, Gottorf and Hütten , Volume 3. Kastrup 1841, p. 1132f.
  3. Hans Nicolai Andreas Jensen : Attempt at church statistics of the Duchy of Schleswig: Containing the provosts of Flensburg, Gottorf and Hütten , Volume 3. Kastrup 1841, p. 1134.

Coordinates: 54 ° 36 ′ 16 "  N , 9 ° 35 ′ 20.9"  E