List of churches in Stuttgart

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Protestant church in the old town of Bad Cannstatt is simply called Stadtkirche

This overview contains all basically Stuttgart existing church building . As far as is known, the construction time, architects, a brief description of the building and any special features were given for each church.

Main churches

Protestant churches

Evangelical churches of the Württemberg regional church

The almost 100 Protestant church buildings and preaching sites in the Stuttgart area belong to a total of 72 parishes . They all together form the Stuttgart church district , which on January 1, 2008 was composed of the four church districts of Stuttgart (up to then 22 parishes), Bad Cannstatt (up to then 20 parishes), Degerloch (up to then 21 parishes) and Zuffenhausen (up to then 11 parishes) originated. Individual parishes thus have several churches or preaching offices. In some cases, parishes have also merged to form overall parishes (e.g. Stuttgart, Bad Cannstatt and Degerloch), but remain independent corporations under public law. The entire parish of Stuttgart was congruent with the church district of Stuttgart. It continues to exist as the “Gesamtkirchengemeinde Stuttgart” corporation, but its church district tasks have been transferred to the church district of Stuttgart.

Most of the Protestant parishes in Stuttgart emerged in the 19th century in the historical districts of Stuttgart, when the parishes were separated from the political parishes. As a result of strong growth, some new church congregations were later detached from these congregations, so that the number of church congregations increased sharply until the 1970s. Recently, some of these new parishes have reunited to form larger parishes (for example in Feuerbach, Zuffenhausen or Stuttgart-Nord).

The former church districts of Stuttgart and Bad Cannstatt, which are superordinate to the parishes, go back to the division of the Kingdom of Württemberg into upper offices. At that time, in addition to the secular bailiff, a special superintendent was appointed who was responsible for church affairs. The special superintendents were later given the title of Dean. It was not until 1938 that Degerloch became the seat of a church district that emerged from the area of ​​the dean's office for the Stuttgart district office , which was separated from the city dean's office in Stuttgart in 1819. The Zuffenhausen church district was established in 1965 when the Bad Cannstatt church district was divided. In 1990, the Bad Cannstatt church district was reduced to the parishes in the city of Stuttgart by assigning its eastern parishes to the Waiblingen church district. Since then, the four church districts of Stuttgart have only included parishes within the city of Stuttgart. In 2008 the four church districts in the city of Stuttgart were united to form the church district of Stuttgart. The churches in Stuttgart are listed in alphabetical order in the following overview.

Illustration Surname Location Coordinates construction time particularities
           
Stuttgart-Untertürkheim Ev.  Old Garden City Church 1.JPG Old garden city church Luginsland 48 ° 47 ′ 26 "N, 9 ° 15 ′ 28" E 1929-1931 The Stuttgart architect Rudolf Behr was commissioned with the construction in 1929 and on October 18, 1931 the church, which cost 182,000 Reichsmarks, was inaugurated. The "Gartenstadtkirchle", destroyed by aerial bombs in 1944, rebuilt from 1948 onwards, has served mainly as a meeting place since 1969.
Old Evangelical Church Stuttgart Heumaden 2015 01.jpg Old church Hayload 48 ° 44 ′ 43 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 18" E 1499 Built from 1499 with a late Gothic choir, inside a sandstone altar with a Christ monogram. In 1666 the church was rebuilt and renovated in 1893. She received a wooden ceiling from Heinrich Dolmetsch . Since then, the pulpit has also been closer to the choir. The church has a two-manual Weigle organ on the tower wall. The late Gothic tracery windows and buttresses of the choir are dated to the 15th century. In the 1960s, the Protestant parish of Heumaden-Süd with its own grace church was separated from the parish.
Old Parish Church Stuttgart-Hedelfingen 2015 01.jpg Old parish church Hedelfingen 48 ° 45 ′ 33 "N, 9 ° 15 ′ 19" E 1468 Today's cemetery church of the Protestant parish Hedelfingen was built in the 13th century as a fortified church. It was destroyed in 1449 and rebuilt from 1468 onwards. She received wall paintings (including the Ten Commandments, the Last Judgment and the legends of saints) that were whitewashed after the Reformation. In 1796 galleries were built. In 1944 the church was damaged by air raids, then restored and in the 1950s the 15th century painting was exposed. In the late 1990s the church was extensively restored.
Stuttgart-Obertürkheim Evang.  Andreaskirche.JPG Andreas Church Obertürkheim 48 ° 45 ′ 51 ″ N, 9 ° 16 ′ 8 ″ E 1927 The Andreas Church was built in 1927 as the second Protestant church in Obertürkheim. The old church is the Petruskirche. Both churches are preaching offices of the Evangelical Church Community Obertürkheim.
Stuttgart-Uhlbach Evang.  Church 1.JPG Andreas Church Uhlbach 48 ° 46 ′ 32 "N, 9 ° 16 ′ 48" E 1490 Built in 1490 in Gothic style, but the previous church was built in 1386; the church tower was rebuilt in 1596 and the whole church again in 1895. Wood and wall paintings.
Cannstatt Andreäkirche.jpg Andreäkirche Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 18 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 8" E 1919 Built in 1919 as a provisional church. The Andreägemeinde bears its name after the theologian Johann Valentin Andreae , who after the Thirty Years' War had a decisive influence on the Württemberg regional church and was particularly active in the diaconal field. In today's Andreäkirche (built in 1956) there is space for 700 people. A large number of groups and circles come together in the associated community rooms. A two-group kindergarten belongs to the community. The Andreägemeinde belongs to the Evangelical General Church Community of Bad Cannstatt.
Stuttgart-Asemwald Evang.  Church 2.JPG Asemwald Church Asem Forest 48 ° 43 ′ 29 "N, 9 ° 11 ′ 33" E 1997 The Asemwald Church, which is sometimes just called the “chapel”, was built in 1997 by the architects Hana and Rainfried Rudolf. The simple church with turret, built around the already existing kindergarten, has had a rotating altarpiece inside since 2002, consisting of four columns. The church only has 100 seats. Before that, the congregation celebrated its services in a multipurpose room of the ecumenical community center. The Asemwald Church is one of the two preaching sites of the Asemwald / Schönberg Evangelical Church Community.
Stuttgart-Botnang Evang.  Church of the Resurrection 1.JPG Church of the Resurrection Botnang 48 ° 46 ′ 47 "N, 9 ° 7 ′ 28" E 1955 1955 built by Knörzer on the ruins of the old Botnang church, built around 1450 and expanded in 1745
Stuttgart-Möhringen Evang.  Church of the Resurrection 1.JPG Church of the Resurrection Möhringen 48 ° 43 '17 "N, 9 ° 9' 38" E 1986 The church was built in 1986 for the Salzäcker residential area. Since 1998 it has housed an organ from the Leonberger Werkstätte Mühleisen . The associated parish is part of the Evangelical General Parish of Möhringen.
Church of the Resurrection Stuttgart-Rot.JPG Church of the Resurrection red 48 ° 50 ′ 6 "N, 9 ° 11 ′ 46" E 1956 As early as the 1930s, a new district "Rotwegiedlung" was built on Rotweg, which was heavily relocated after the Second World War and was called the Rot district. The architect Prof. Erwin Rohrberg planned a church for the residents of the district, which was completed in 1956 (inauguration on December 2nd). She received a Walcker organ and a three-dimensional sculpture by Jürgen Weber. The windows come from the glass artist Christian Oehlers . Two studios for artists were housed in the tower of the church. In 1964 the Evangelical Church Community in Rot became independent. In 1969 the congregation built the parish hall some distance from the church, which was named "Comeniushaus". Since May 2005 the Evangelical Church Community of Rot, together with the neighboring communities of Freiberg, Mönchfeld and the Nazarius community of Zazenhausen, has formed the overall Evangelical Church Community of Himmelsleiter, which was named after an old designation .
BergerKirche.jpg Berger Church mountain 48 ° 47 '48 "N, 9 ° 12' 38" E 1853-1855 Built 1853–55 in neo-Gothic style instead of a dilapidated previous building (approx. 1470) by the architect Ludwig Friedrich Gaab (1800–1869), nave with a western tower in front, repaired in 1955 after being severely damaged in the Second World War.
Stuttgart-Rohracker Evang.  Bernhardskirche 2.JPG Bernhardskirche Rohracker 48 ° 45 '24 "N, 9 ° 13' 49" E 15th century Late Gothic church building from the 15th century, redesigned in Baroque style in the 17th century and restoration of the late Gothic appearance during renovations in the 20th century.
Evang.  Blumhardtkirche Bad Cannstatt.JPG Blumhardt Church Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 0 ″ N, 9 ° 13 ′ 21 ″ E The Blumhardtgemeinde belongs to the Evangelical General Church Community Bad Cannstatt.
Stuttgart-Fasanenhof Evang.  Church 3.JPG Bonhoefferkirche Fasanenhof 48 ° 42 ′ 39 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 11" E 1960s The Dietrich Bonhoeffer Church was built for the Fasanenhof housing estate, which was built in the 1960s and which got its name from a former pheasantry of Duke Eberhard Ludwig and a former pleasure palace Carl Eugen. The associated Evangelical parish was separated from the Möhringen.
Stuttgart Evang.  Brenzkirche.JPG Brenz Church North 48 ° 47 ′ 57 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 27" E 1933 Named after the reformer Johannes Brenz . As a result of the strong growth of the population in Stuttgart-Nord in the Killesberg area, the Brenzkirche was built in 1933 and a short time later a separate parish was separated from the Erlöserkirchengemeinde. The church was built according to plans by Alfred Daiber in the New Building style in the immediate vicinity of the famous Weißenhofsiedlung . Before that, the residents celebrated their services in the rooms of the art academy. In 1938/39, the church building was adapted to the building ideas of the Third Reich due to the planned 1939 Reichsgartenschau (corners instead of curves, right-angled instead of sloping windows, gables instead of flat roofs). In 1970 the Christophkirche was built on the Killesberg as another preaching place for the Brenz parish. In the 1990s, the number of parishioners fell sharply again. Therefore, on January 1, 1997, the Brenz parish joined forces with the Redeemer and Martin parishes to form a new parish in Stuttgart North.
Stuttgart Evang.  Christophkirche - Tower.JPG Christoph Church North 48 ° 48 '11 "N, 9 ° 9' 46" E 1970 Named after Duke Christoph von Württemberg . Built in 1970 as the second preaching station of the Brenz church parish based on designs by the architects Fiedler and Aichele. Since January 1, 1997, it has been part of the newly founded Evangelical Church Community of Stuttgart-Nord with the Brenz, Erlöser and Martins congregations.
Christ Church Stuttgart.jpg Christ Church on the Gänsheide Gänsheide 48 ° 46 ′ 31 "N, 9 ° 11 ′ 43" E 1954-1956 In 1914 a prayer hall was built for the population on Gänsheide, which at that time belonged to the collegiate community. In 1930 the parish became independent. Since the prayer room was destroyed in 1943, today's Christ Church with parish hall was built between 1954 and 1956. The sculpture of Christ ascending to heaven was created in 1963 by the sculptor Ruth Speidel . The church is located near the Evangelical Upper Church Council Württemberg and is visible from afar due to its exposed location.
Evang.  Christ Church Stuttgart-Hofen.JPG Christ Church Hofen 48 ° 49 ′ 58 ″ N, 9 ° 13 ′ 6 ″ E 1958 Built in 1958 by Zoller. In Stuttgart's only Catholic district, the Protestants who moved here mainly after the Second World War and who belong to the Mühlhausen parish first celebrated their services in a restaurant until the Christ Church was built. The bells left the neighboring municipality of Münster. In 1962 the Evangelical Church Community of Hofen became independent; a full pastoral office was not established until 1967.
Stuttgart-Möhringen Evang.  Christ Church 1.JPG Christ Church Möhringen 48 ° 43 '38 "N, 9 ° 9' 34" E 1957 The church was consecrated on June 23, 1957. The architect was Walter Ruff , who in addition to the actual church space also built group rooms, a kindergarten and apartments. In the interior, the four Christ windows by Christian Oehler and the wooden altar by Gottfried Gruner are worth mentioning. The church belongs to the Evangelical Parish of Möhringen.
Stuttgart-Dachswald Evang.  Church.JPG Dachswald Church Vaihingen 48 ° 44 '50 "N, 9 ° 7' 24" E 1969 The church was built in 1969 for the settlement of the same name. It is the second preaching position of the Thomaskirchengmeinde Kaltental.
Deaconess Church Stuttgart.jpg Deaconess Church west 48 ° 46 ′ 51 ″ N, 9 ° 9 ′ 46 ″ E 1850s For the Protestant Diakonissenanstalt Stuttgart, a church foundation under civil law, founded in 1854 , the Diakonissenkirche was built as the spiritual center of the mother house. The church has 200 seats.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer Church Weilimdorf 48 ° 48 ′ 42 "N, 9 ° 7 ′ 14" E For the rapidly growing population of the Weilimdorf district, a provisional wooden church was built in 1960 as an additional church service room (in addition to the old Oswald Church). Two years later it was named "Evangelical Dietrich Bonhoeffer Community". In 1984 the Dietrich Bonhoeffer community center with a kindergarten was finally established in Wormser Strasse. The parish became legally independent on January 1, 1989, when it was separated from the Oswald parish. But it still belongs to the Evangelical Church Community of Stuttgart-Weilimdorf.
Stuttgart-Vaihingen Evang.  Trinity Church.JPG Trinity Church Vaihingen 48 ° 43 '35 "N, 9 ° 6' 25" E 1960 The Holy Trinity Church was built in 1960 as the population grew rapidly. Today the church is one of the four preaching offices of the Evangelical Church Community Stuttgart-Vaihingen.
Evang.  Church Stuttgart-Münster.JPG Trinity Church Muenster 48 ° 49 ′ 20 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 57" E 1955 Münster originally had an old St. Ottilien church in the center of the village, which was replaced in 1889 by a new neo-Gothic building by Christian Friedrich von Leins . This building was destroyed in 1943. Instead of rebuilding, it was decided to build a new building elsewhere. This is how the present-day Trinity Church of Zoller was built in 1955.
Stuttgart-Riedenberg Evang.  Emmauskirche 2.JPG Emmaus Church Riedenberg 48 ° 44 ′ 11 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 48" E 1955 The church of Plieningen, which from 1782 belonged to Birkach, received its own church in 1955, which was built by the architect Hans Seytter . The interior was designed by sculptor Helmuth Uhrig and glass painter Valentin Saile . Before that, the congregation celebrated its services in the old school or in private houses. At that time its own parish was established and in 1957 the parish received its own pastor.
Evang.  Erlöserkirche Stuttgart-Nord 1.JPG Church of the Redeemer North 48 ° 47 '24 "N, 9 ° 10' 41" E 1954 For the rapidly growing population in the north of Stuttgart, belonging to the Martinsgemeinde, the Erlöserkirche was built between 1906 and 1908 by the architect Theodor Fischer in Art Nouveau style in tufa and soon became a parish of its own. Inside there are sculptures by the sculptors Jakob Brüllmann and Emil Kiemlen and paintings by Paul Bollmann and Graf. After the church was largely destroyed by fire bombs in 1944, it was rebuilt in 1954 by the Fischer student Rudolph Lempp . The church windows are by Adolf Saile . The Brenz congregation split off from the Redeemer parish in the 1930s. In the 1990s, the number of church members decreased more and more. Therefore, on January 1, 1997, the Redeemer Church congregation merged with the Martinsgemeinde and the Brenzgemeinde to form the new Evangelical Church Congregation Stuttgart-Nord.
Birkach Franziska Tower 2006-06-15.jpg Franziska Church Birkach 48 ° 43 ′ 13 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 44" E 1780 The church was built in 1780 by the architect Reinhard Ferdinand Heinrich Fischer on behalf of the Catholic Duke Carl Eugen von Württemberg for his evangelical lover or wife Franziska von Hohenheim and consecrated on November 4, 1780. The neighboring rectory was built with the church. The pulpit and the Franziska-Loge can only be entered from here. Inside there are beautiful stucco work of the church built in the style of early classicism. The neighboring town of Riedenberg also belonged to the Evangelical Parish of Birkach, but in 1955 it received its own church and parish.
Stuttgart Evang.  Friedenskirche.JPG Friedenskirche center 48 ° 47 '10 "N, 9 ° 11' 34" E 1890-1892 The church was built in the neo-Romanesque style by architect Dollinger in 1890–92 for the population in the north of the city center. Soon afterwards the own parish was established. In 1944 the church burned down except for the tower on which the figures of the apostles can be found. In 1966 a new ship was added as a modern concrete structure. In the church there are regular organ concerts on the built-in Rensch organ.
Evang.  Föhrichkirche Feuerbach 2.JPG Föhrich Church Feuerbach 48 ° 48 ′ 40 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 50" E 1929 The Föhrich Church was built in 1929 as a makeshift church and is a pure wooden church. It was planned to replace them as soon as the money for a “real” church is together. The lifespan of this wooden church was estimated at 30 years. In the following decades there were other problems than renewing this Church. Due to the wood protection measures that are possible today, this wooden church will be preserved for a very long time. In 1967 the organ in the church was renewed and in 1968 a stained glass window "Der Wiederkommende Herr" (The Returning Man), donated by Martin Single, was installed. The stained glass window bears the inscription: “Donated in 1968 by Martin Single in memory of his son Ewald, who died in Russia in March 1944.” The Evangelical parish belonging to the Föhrich Church has been (again) part of the Evangelical parish of Feuerbach since January 1, 2005. The Föhrich Church is now mainly used by the Russian Orthodox Church.
Stuttgart-Untertürkheim Ev.  Garden City Church 1.JPG Garden City Church Luginsland 48 ° 47 ′ 26 "N, 9 ° 15 ′ 31" E 1969 Built in 1969 as a massive concrete building by the architect Heinz Rall , equipped with magnificent pictures by Emil Kiess on the altar wall. The church is one of the four preaching sites of the Protestant parish of Untertürkheim.
Stuttgart Evang.  Gedächtniskirche.JPG Memorial Church North 48 ° 47 '7 "N, 9 ° 9' 49" E 1954-1957 The church was built in 1896–1899 as a hall church in the shape of an orthogonal house with a gently sloping gable roof by the architect Reinhardt . It was a foundation of the Kommerzienrat Julius von Jobst for his wife Mathilde. After it was destroyed in the Second World War , the church was rebuilt in a modified form from 1954–1957 by the architect Helmut Erdle (1906–1991); the old church tower was encased in a new clinker brick facade. Inside there is a concrete work in the altar area by Emil Cimiotti and a tower window by Max Ackermann . The memorial parish has been the seat of the Stuttgart city dean since 1970. This is also where the International Bach Academy has its roots. In 2001 the parish merged with the Rosenberg parish to form the new Evangelical Memorial and Rosenberg parish.
Stuttgart-Heumaden Evang.  Gnadenkirche 3.JPG Mercy Church Hayload 48 ° 44 '29 "N, 9 ° 13' 42" E 1960s Modern church with a folded concrete roof and community center for the parishioners in Heumaden-Süd, built in the 1960s. It has since been renovated and is a successful example of modern church architecture. The associated community was separated from the parish of Heumaden (today Alt-Heumaden).
Evang.  Gustav Werner Church Feuerbach 1.JPG Gustav Werner Church Feuerbach 48 ° 48 '24 "N, 9 ° 8' 53" E 1954-1955 The church was built in 1954/1955 for the west of the Feuerbach district with a parish hall and kindergarten. In 1974 the artist Karl Hemmeter created the altar cross from bronze. The church is named after Gustav Werner (1809–1887), the foundation of the same name in Reutlingen named after him. The evangelical parish belonging to the Gustav Werner Church has been (again) part of the Evangelical parish in Feuerbach since January 1, 2005.
Evang.  Haigstkirche Stuttgart-Degerloch 3.JPG Haigstkirche Degerloch 48 ° 45 ′ 18 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 22" E 1952-1953 A separate parish was founded in 1951 for the population of the Haigst residential area between downtown Stuttgart and the Degerloch district, and a small church was built in 1952/53 by the architect Friedrich Lauxmann . Inside is a rainbow-themed parament by Peter Gohl, a tapestry by Regine Schönthaler, a bronze baptismal device by Ingrid Seddig and nativity figures by Frida Christaller. The church window by Hans Schreiner (1987) has texts from the Sermon on the Mount.
Evang.  Heilandskirche Stuttgart-Ost.JPG Heilandskirche east 48 ° 47 ′ 27 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 15" E 1964 Duchess Wera von Württemberg donated a simple traveling church to the residents of East Stuttgart in 1899 not far from Villa Berg. In 1911 she even donated a new building, which was built in 1913 in the neo-Romanesque style by the architect Ludwig Eisenlohr . The sculptural decoration of the facade and the main portal was created by Josef Zeitler . As a special feature, the deed of foundation shows that only those theologians should be active in the church who “are wholeheartedly on the positive ground and uncritical teaching of Holy Scripture and the Apostles' Creed”. So the community of old pietists also received a corresponding worship room. In 1944 the church was destroyed, but it was rebuilt in 1964, modified. An inner courtyard has now been created between the tower and the church service room, which can be used in many ways. The church also became home to the Russian-German community. In 2005 the project choir Gospel in the East was founded.
Stuttgart-Degerloch Evang.  Holy Spirit Church 1.JPG Holy Spirit Church Degerloch 48 ° 44 ′ 39 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 56" E 1954-1955 Built in 1954/55 according to plans by Walter Ruff for the rapidly growing population of Degerloch. The associated parishes continue to belong to the Evangelical General Parish of Degerloch.
Stuttgart-Schönberg Evang.  Ascension Church 2.JPG Assumption Church Schoenberg 48 ° 43 '57 "N, 9 ° 12'7" E 1958 A church was built in 1958 by the architect Erwin Rohrberg for the Schönberg district, which was built in the 1950s. It was inaugurated on Ascension Day and thus received its name. The church has a pentagonal floor plan with a central spire, in which the worship room is above the parish hall. Inside is a glass picture by Christian Oehler "Feeding the Five Thousand". The neighboring Asemwald district also belongs to the parish, but has had its own church there since 1997.
Stuttgart-Hoffeld Evang.  Church.JPG Hoffeldkirche Hofeld 48 ° 44 ′ 5 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 45" E 1934 For the district of the same name, the Hoffeldkirche was built by Klatte in 1934 and soon became an independent parish. However, this still belongs to the Evangelical General Church Community Degerloch.
Stuttgart-hospitalkirche.jpg Hospital Church Old town 48 ° 46 ′ 40 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 22" E 1951-1960 Three-aisled hall church built from 1471 to 1493 under the direction of Aberlin Jörg for a Dominican monastery. As is usual for such monasteries, the church initially did not have a tower. The tower was not added until 1730. After the Reformation, the monastery was converted into a hospital. At the beginning of the 19th century it was next to the collegiate church and together with the Leonhardskirche parish church for part of today's inner city. In 1944 the church was totally destroyed by a bomb. The tower and choir were rebuilt from 1951 to 1960. A crucifixion group by Hans Seyfer (Hans von Heilbronn, 1501), the Sachsenheimer altar (1489) and tombs from the 16th and 17th centuries can be seen in the choir . The crucifixion group is a top work of medieval sculpture and did not come to the hospital church until 1888. Today the administrative center of the Evangelical Church District Stuttgart is connected to the Hospital Church. The Hospitalhof is also an evangelical adult education center. The regional synod of the Evangelical Church in Württemberg meets here regularly.
James Church Hausen 48 ° 48 ′ 54 "N, 9 ° 5 ′ 4" E 2004 The simple parish hall was rebuilt in 2004 on Heckwiesenweg. Until then, the previous building, a simple little wooden church on Hausenring, was in the immediate vicinity of the new building. The current church building has been used ecumenically since then. The Protestant residents of the Hausen district belong to the Evangelical Stephanus Church Community of Giebel, which in turn is part of the overall Evangelical Church Community of Stuttgart-Weilimdorf.
Stuttgart-Feuersee.jpg Johanneskirche am Feuersee west 48 ° 46 '24 "N, 9 ° 9' 52" E 1864-1876 The church was built between 1864 and 1876 in neo-Gothic style according to plans by senior building officer Christian Friedrich von Leins . It is considered one of the main works of this architectural style and was the first church consecration in Stuttgart after more than 400 years. After the destruction in World War II, the church received new windows from Rudolf Yelin the Elder. J. (1969) and A. Saile (1977-1980). The spire was not rebuilt.
StgtStammheim Johanneskirche.jpg Johanneskirche Stammheim 48 ° 50 '53 "N, 9 ° 9' 36" E 1487-1522,
1954
The old village of Stammheim had a church that was built between 1487 and 1522 under the local rulers. During the Second World War the church was badly damaged and some of it had to be demolished. Only the choir remained. The ship and tower were rebuilt in 1954. As a result of the strong growth of the community, a prefabricated community center was built in Stammheid-Süd. This was named "Arche" and is today the second sermon point of the Evangelical Parish in Stammheim.
Johanneskirche Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen 03.JPG Johanneskirche Zuffenhausen 48 ° 49 ′ 54 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 33" E 1951-1956 Built around 1270 in the early Gothic style with a defensive defense tower. Originally consecrated to Saint Hippolytus, the church was badly damaged in the Thirty Years War, but it was rebuilt. After the construction of the Pauluskirche in 1903, the old Zuffenhausen church was named Johanniskirche, later Johanneskirche. It burned down in 1944 and was rebuilt from 1951 to 1956. When the church district of Zuffenhausen was formed in 1965, the Johanneskirche was designated as the seat of the dean. In 1977/78 the church was expanded to include the "Johanneshof" parish hall. In 2000, the Johanneskirche congregation merged with the parishes that were separated from it in the 20th century, the Paulus and Michaelskirchengemeinde Neuwirtshaus, to form today's Evangelical Parish in Zuffenhausen.
Stuttgart-Hohenheim Evang.  Church 1.JPG Hohenheim-Steckfeld church Plieningen 48 ° 42 ′ 55 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 11" E 1966 The church was built in Steckfeld in 1966 together with a community center, rectory and sacristan's apartment for the districts of Hohenheim and Steckfeld. Today the new district of Chausseefeld also belongs to the municipality. The university community of the University of Hohenheim is also represented in the associated Evangelical Church Community of Plieningen-Hohenheim .
Evang.  Church Stuttgart-Mönchfeld.JPG Mönchfeld Church Mönchfeld 48 ° 50 ′ 34 "N, 9 ° 13 ′ 22" E 1966 For the Mönchfeld district, which was created from 1957, a separate parish was established on January 1, 1965. Before that the parishioners belonged to the parish Mühlhausen. Just one year later, in 1966, it was possible to build its own church, which the architect Hans Wolfram Theil planned. A community center and a kindergarten were built in 1961. The first service in the Mönchfeldkirche took place on June 12, 1966. The Pentecost window by Heinz Knödler is a special feature of the church. Since May 2005, the Evangelical Church Community of Mönchfeld, together with the neighboring communities of Rot, Freiberg and the Nazarius community of Zazenhausen, has formed the Evangelical Church Community of Himmelsleiter, which is named after an old designation. See also Mönchfeld bell tower .
Stuttgart-Rotenberg Evang.  Church 1.JPG Rotenberg village church Rotenberg 48 ° 47 ′ 1 ″ N, 9 ° 16 ′ 19 ″ E 1754-1756 The jewel of the village of Rotenberg, located high in the vineyards, is the baroque church with onion dome built between 1754 and 1756. It is regarded as a rarely preserved example of a Swabian village church with a square floor plan. Originally there was a church in Rotenberg, which was built around a Marienkapelle built in 1495. Since this was too small, it had to be expanded. During a renovation in 2002, the paintings and colors were exposed and the original color scheme restored.
Stuttgart-Sonnenberg Evang.  Church.JPG Sonnenberg Church Sonnenberg 48 ° 44 '33 "N, 9 ° 9' 17" E The Sonnenberg district emerged as early as 1914 and was expanded primarily in the 1930s and after the Second World War. The residents initially belonged to the parish of Möhringen, but received an emergency church during the war. In 1966, the architect Ernst Gisel from Zurich was able to build a church in exposed concrete with a free-standing tower and adjoining community center and kindergarten as well as sacristan's apartment. All the details of the church, such as lamps, paraments and door handles, are made from one piece. In the courtyard there is a fountain whose water is used for baptismal services in summer. With the construction of the church, the Evangelical Church Community of Sonnenberg also became independent.
Stuttgart-Hedelfingen Evang.  Kreuzkirche 1.JPG Kreuzkirche Hedelfingen 48 ° 45 ′ 29 "N, 9 ° 15 ′ 22" E The Kreuzkirche from 1929/1930 represents the first church building in Stuttgart in the objectified Bauhaus-oriented style of New Building, which also characterizes the architecture of the Weißenhofsiedlung (1927). Although the young Swiss architect Paul Trüdinger initially received little approval from the parish council with his modern plan, he finally managed to find a majority with a bold design and the associated optimal use of space. Thanks to the iron framework construction technique he used, large spans could be achieved so that supports could be dispensed with. The church interior with a semicircular apse can be opened through a folding door to the community hall, in the massive tower there are three community rooms. The lightness of the building was underlined by a surrounding band of light and writing (text from Ephesians 4, 4–6) so that the smooth ceiling appears to float. The church is almost completely preserved in its original form and is used for church services, congregation groups and cultural purposes.
Evang.  Kreuzkirche Stuttgart-Süd.JPG Kreuzkirche Heslach 48 ° 45 ′ 35 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 3" E The district of Heslach, which today belongs to the Stuttgart-Süd district, was originally a small hamlet that, although always part of Stuttgart, was spatially separated from it. In 1497, a first chapel is attested in Heslach, but it was dilapidated and was therefore replaced in 1503 by a new “Our Lady” building. However, this pilgrimage church did not survive the Reformation. It was demolished in 1542 and the stones were used to build the old chancellery. In 1548 a new church was finally built on Bihlplatz, not far from today's Kreuzkirche. The associated parish was initially looked after by the pastor in Botnang, and from 1751 by the pastor of the Stuttgart garrison church (which no longer exists). In 1826 a parish of its own was established in Heslach. In the 19th century, the district of Heslach (referred to as "Karlsvorstadt" from 1889), so that the church became too small. Therefore, a new church, the Matthäuskirche, was built in 1881 on Möhringer Straße, at today's Erwin-Schoettle-Platz, and the old Heslacher church (again) demolished. The crucifix of the old church was transferred to the new building. But soon this church was no longer sufficient. In 1908, not far from today's Kreuzkirche, an emergency church, the so-called (old) Kreuzkirche, was built. In 1913 the associated Kreuzgemeinde was separated from the Matthäusgemeinde and became independent, but the congregation had to wait until 1931 for a new church to be built. The (new) Kreuzkirche was built directly at the Heslach cemetery in 1930–31, built by the architect Rudolf Behr in the “new objectivity” style. The church got a four-part bell ringing. After the number of parish members had shrunk in the first years of the 21st century, the Kreuzgemeinde merged on January 1, 2006 with the Matthew parish, from which it was split off, to form the new Evangelical parish in Stuttgart Heslach.
Stuttgart-Rohr Evang.  Laurentiuskirche 1.JPG Laurentiuskirche pipe 48 ° 43 ′ 0 ″ N, 9 ° 6 ′ 19 ″ E The old village of Rohr had a church that can be traced back to the 14th century. However, only the tower of this old church exists, which was given a half-timbered tower in 1740. The ship was rebuilt in 1926 by the architect Martin Elsaesser , but this was also demolished at the end of the 1970s due to structural damage. In 1980 the architects Rainer Zinsmeister and Giselher Scheffler built a modern community center. In addition to the church service room, community rooms, apartments, a kindergarten and a diakonia station were built.
Stuttgart Leonhardskirche05.JPG Leonhard's Church center 48 ° 46 '24 "N, 9 ° 10' 50" E The second oldest church in the city after the collegiate church was built in 1337 as a field chapel for St. Leonhard at the gates of the city. Around 1408 a single-nave church was built on the same site, from which 1463–1466 under Aberlin Jörg a three-aisled church was built in today's size in the late Gothic style. Bombed out in 1944 and rebuilt in a simplified manner in 1948–54. In 1522 the humanist Johannes Reuchlin was buried in the church . In front of the church, on the side of the choir, the crucifixion group by Hans Seyfer (1501; replica from 1976, the original is in the hospital church). In the Leonhardskirche u. a. Gustav Schwab (from 1841 to 1845). The social project Vesperkirche Stuttgart has been carried out here since 1995 .
Evang.  Ludwig Hofacker Church Stuttgart 1.JPG Ludwig Hofacker Church center 48 ° 46 ′ 11 "N, 9 ° 11 ′ 15" E The church in the Dobel district was rebuilt in 1950 by Otto Bartning in place of a church built by the architect Zacharias Schäffer in 1932 and completely destroyed in the Second World War. It is one of 48 so-called emergency churches in Germany. Partly from rubble and with American donations were built according to standardized construction plans. All these buildings are typical witnesses of their era due to their simple construction and formal rigor. The church got its name from the revival preacher Ludwig Hofacker (1798–1828).
Evang.  Lukaskirche Stuttgart-Ost 1.JPG Lukas Church east 48 ° 47 ′ 13 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 16" E The Lukaskirche was built in 1898/1899 by the architects Wittmann & Stahl with early Gothic elements as a hall church with a small choir and gallery churches. It was inaugurated in the presence of the Württemberg royal couple. The 61 m high tower has become Ostheim's landmark. The facade is made of a combination of clinker and natural stone, and on the outside there are also cast-iron balconies and varying gable shapes. The nave of the church was destroyed in the Second World War. In 1948–1951 it was rebuilt and redesigned based on the previous structure. The interior features an organ by Weigle , a crucifix, principal pieces and stained glass windows under the side gallery and in the ship by Helmuth Uhrig . 1977–1978 the church was redesigned again. The church served as the backdrop for the filming of the television series "Pfarrerin Lenau", which was shown on ARD in 1990/91. On January 1, 2005, the Lukas Congregation merged with the neighboring Lutherhaus Congregation to form the new Evangelical Lukas and Lutherhaus Congregation. But both churches will remain as preaching and event locations for the time being.
Evang.  Lutherhauskirche Stuttgart-Ost.JPG Lutherhauskirche east 48 ° 47 '15 "N, 9 ° 12' 51" E The church was built in 1928 by the architect Schäffer as a so-called reform church (= church hall, community rooms, kindergarten and apartments are united under one roof). It is a well-preserved example of the architecture of the “ Stuttgart School ” with expressionist elements. On January 1, 2005, the Luther House Congregation merged with the neighboring Lukas Congregation to form the new Evangelical Lukas and Luther House Congregation. But both churches will remain as preaching and event locations for the time being.
Stuttgart Martin Luther Church Bad Cannstatt.JPG Luther Church Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 '16 "N, 9 ° 13' 26" E The Cannstatter Lutherkirche on Waiblinger Strasse was built between 1895 and 1900 according to plans by Richard Böklen and Carl Feil . It is one of the first brick-built churches in southern Germany. It is modeled on the style of French cathedrals, but shows an independent architecture, a compact floor plan, side galleries that provide an overview, generous lighting of the windows and durable material. The tower is decorated with small corner turrets, the capitals are adorned with plant decorations. In February 1944 the choir and sacristy of the church were destroyed, but the church was rededicated in 1950. The interior renovation was carried out in the 1970s. The windows in the choir were created by Wolf-Dieter Kohler . The Luther parish belongs to the Evangelical General Church Parish Bad Cannstatt.
Evang.  Luther Church Feuerbach 1.JPG Luther Church Feuerbach 48 ° 48 '38 "N, 9 ° 9' 39" E The Luther Church was built in 1983 in connection with the Burgenland Center. This gave the community its long-awaited space for its community work. The interior design (art glass windows and wooden altar group) was carried out by Jörn Ehlers. Before that, the Luther Community held its services in a former inn "Zum Goldenen Schlüssel", which was redesigned in the 1920s and which was initially called the Luther Hall. It later became the "Luther Church". The Protestant parish belonging to the Luther Church has been (again) part of the Feuerbach Protestant parish since January 1, 2005.
Markuskirche Stuttgart-Sued.jpg St. Mark's Church south 48 ° 45 ′ 53 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 27" E The church was built in 1906/1908 by the architect Heinrich Dolmetsch in Art Nouveau style. It is a three-aisled hall church in plastered masonry. The side-mounted tower (48.5 m) is one of the world's first sacred buildings made of reinforced concrete. The pulpit inlays by Rudolf Yelin the Elder are of the interior . Ä. and the altar decorations in craft leather with wooden inlays should be mentioned. The organ's prospectus is the only one north of the Alps made of stone. The position of the organ and the singing gallery behind the altar is exceptional. The interior, which was restored in 1976-78, is a unified hall, which is spanned by a barrel vault with cassettes. The church, named after the Evangelist Mark, remained almost undamaged during World War II. Therefore, after the war, it moved into the focus of the world public. On the evening of October 17, 1945, an evening service was celebrated in the Markuskirche and on the following day the “ Stuttgart confession of guilt ” was formulated. This is a declaration by the Evangelical Church in Germany that it is complicit in National Socialism. This confession of guilt was handed over on October 19th by the EKD Council to a delegation from the World Council of Churches. To commemorate this event, a plaque is attached to the Markuskirche.
Stuttgart-Sillenbuch Evang.  Church 2.JPG Martin Luther Church Sillenbuch 48 ° 44 ′ 54 "N, 9 ° 13 ′ 4" E The small town of Sillenbuch initially belonged to Hedelfingen, from 1441 to Rohracker. When the tram line to Stuttgart opened in 1930, the place grew rapidly and in 1933 it received its own church, the Martin Luther Church.
Stuttgart Evang.  Martinskirche 1.JPG Martinskirche North 48 ° 47 ′ 43 "N, 9 ° 11 ′ 20" E When the urban area of ​​Stuttgart expanded northwards in the 19th century, the Martinsgemeinde was founded in 1887. In 1889 she received a chapel - with financial support from Paul Lechler . In 1908 the Erlöserkirche was built on Birkenwaldstraße and separated from the Martinsgemeinde as an independent parish. In 1933 the Brenz parish separated from the Erlöserkirchen parish after the latter had also built its own church. It was not until 1937 that the mother parish received a new church near the Prague cemetery , but the building was badly damaged by bombs in 1944. In the 1990s, the number of parishioners in all parishes decreased. Therefore, the Martinsgemeinde merged with the Erlösergemeinde and the Brenzgemeinde on January 1, 1997 to form the new Evangelical Church Community of Stuttgart-Nord. In addition to the three churches, the parish on the Killesberg has another preaching place, the Christophkirche, built in 1970, which belonged to the Brenz parish until 1996.
S-Moehringen-Martinskirche.jpg Martinskirche Möhringen 48 ° 43 ′ 33 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 41" E A small wooden church was built in Möhringen as early as the 6th century. Then in the 13th century there was a stone church. This church was single-nave, narrow and low and received its first organ after the Reformation in 1595. In 1840 the church had become so dilapidated that it had to be rebuilt. This was built in the neo-Gothic style by Christian Friedrich von Leins in 1852–1855 . The new nave was connected to the old Gothic choir of the previous church. The font from 1595 and the stone pulpit of the previous church were transferred to the new church. The 63 m high new tower can be seen from afar. The church is popularly referred to as “Filderdom” because of its size (the nave with galleries has a total of 1700 seats). On 15./16. In March 1944, the church was partially destroyed after an air raid and rebuilt in a simplified form in 1948/49. Today it only has 700 places. The Martinskirche parish today belongs to the Evangelical Community Parish Möhringen.
Stuttgart-Plieningen Evang.  Martinskirche 1.JPG Martinskirche Plieningen 48 ° 42 ′ 5 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 56" E The oldest church in Stuttgart has its origins as a Romanesque stone building in the St. Martinus Church, which was built in the 12th century. This is indicated by the arched windows, an arched frieze with rams and human heads and relief panels under the eaves. The current church was completed in 1517 in the late Gothic style. Inside, a crucifix from 1520, the stucco ceiling from 1751, the double gallery from 1901 and glass windows by Wolf-Dieter Kohler from 1966 can be admired.
Evang.  Matthäuskirche Stuttgart-Süd 1.JPG Matthew Church south 48 ° 45 '43 "N, 9 ° 9' 39" E As a replacement for the old Heslach church on Bihlplatz, which had become too small, the Matthäuskirche was built on Möhringer Strasse, at today's Erwin-Schoettle-Platz, in the neo-Romanesque style in 1876-81 by the architect Wolff according to plans by Konrad Dollinger . The old church on Bihlplatz was demolished. However, the crucifix of this church was transferred to the Matthäuskirche. This gave the parish of Heslach (now Matthäusgemeinde), which had had its own pastor since 1826, a new, larger church. In 1913, the Kreuzgemeinde was separated from it, which had had its own emergency church at the Heslach cemetery since 1908 and was finally given a new building in 1931 (for more details see Kreuzkirche Heslach). Because of its size, especially the 44 m high dome and the 65 m high slender tower, the St. Matthew's Church was soon referred to as "Heslach Cathedral". In 1943 the Matthäuskirche was badly damaged, but the church could be used again the following year. In July and September 1944 the church was damaged again, so that parts of the vault collapsed, the organ was destroyed and the church roof burned. After the war, reconstruction began and was completed in 1950. The church received a Weigle organ on which "International Organ Concerts" take place. The Gothic crucifix from the old Heslach church was saved during the war because it had been moved to the Bad Friedrichshall salt mine .
Evang.  Church Stuttgart-Freiberg - Tower.JPG Michael's house Freiberg 48 ° 50 ′ 31 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 32" E The Evangelical Church Community of Stuttgart-Freiberg was founded in 1967 for the new Freiberg district that was created in 1965. The young congregation was able to move into its own church service room in 1976 in the form of the Evangelisches Michaelshaus congregation center. The community center is a model. In 1989, instead of the usual bell tower, a separate tower with a carillon was erected in front of the building. Since May 2005, the Evangelical Church Community Freiberg, together with the parishes of Rot, Mönchfeld and the Nazarius community of Stuttgart-Zazenhausen, have formed the Evangelical General Church Community of Himmelsleiter, which got its name from an old designation.
Stuttgart-Degerloch Evang.  Michaelskirche 1.JPG Michaelskirche Degerloch 48 ° 44 ′ 46 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 15" E Degerloch belonged to Möhringen until the 15th century, but there was a small church for a long time. In 1468 Degerloch became its own parish and soon a small Gothic church was built. In 1621 the builder Heinrich Schickhardt extended the ship to double its length. Nevertheless, the church became too small in the 19th century due to the rapid growth of the community. Today's Michaelskirche was built in 1890 by the architect Christian Friedrich von Leins and the construction management of the architect Heinrich Dolmetsch as a three-aisled church in the neo-Romanesque style and consecrated on November 23, 1890. The choir windows come from Walter Kohler, whose father was pastor there from 1922 to 1934. In 1938, the Michaelskirche became the seat of the church district Degerloch, which emerged from the area of ​​the then disbanded Amtsoberamt Stuttgart. This administrative district was ecclesiastically led by a dean. Mostly it was the pastor of the Leonhardskirche. In 1919 the deanery was relocated to Plieningen and in 1938 to Degerloch. The church district grew steadily and eventually became the largest church district of the Evangelical Church in Württemberg. Therefore, on January 1, 1981, the new Bernhausen church district was established for the communities on the Filder Plain outside Stuttgart and some of them were assigned to the Böblingen church district. Since then, the church district of Degerloch only includes Stuttgart parishes. The Michaelsgemeinde Degerloch today belongs to the Evangelical Church Community of Degerloch.
Nwh michaelskirche.jpg Michaelskirche Neuwirtshaus 48 ° 50 ′ 9 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 34" E For the rapidly growing population in Zuffenhausen, the Michaelskirche was built in 1938 in the Neuwirtshaus district by Professor Heim in Scandinavian style. Bishop Wurm consecrated them. On the side of the altar, the church has red chalk paintings depicting the life story of Jesus from his birth to his ascension. In 1955, the Johann-Albrecht-Bengel-Haus was built in the east of the associated parish as a further preaching site with an associated kindergarten. The simple church with a turret , in which two small bells hang, received a large enamel cross from Wolf-Dieter Kohler in 1973 . In 2004 this building was sold to the Romanian Orthodox parish of Jesus Christ's Birth in Stuttgart. This is currently converting the church into an orthodox church. The Michaelskirchengemeinde, which was separated from the Johanneskirche community in the 20th century, merged with this and the neighboring Pauluskirchengemeinde in Zuffenhausen to form the Evangelical Church Community of Zuffenhausen.
S-wangen-michaelskirche.jpg Michaelskirche Cheeks 48 ° 46 ′ 12 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 28" E Presumably there was a church in Wangen that was dedicated to Saint Michael very early on. However, today's church was only built around 1250 as a single-nave choir tower church. Loopholes and defensive walls identify it as a fortified church. There is a figurative representation of Michael on the tower. The sacrament house was built in 1360. Stefan Waid's baptismal font dates from 1495. In the 17th century the tower and nave were raised, and in the 19th century the nave was widened. In 1903 it was significantly rebuilt. She received a painting with Art Nouveau motifs in the choir, on the galleries and on the front wall of the ship. These wall and wood paintings were renovated in 1999.
Stuttgart Zazenhausen Nazarius Church.JPG Nazarius Church Zazenhausen 48 ° 50 ′ 29 "N, 9 ° 11 ′ 53" E The church in the old village of Zazenhausen was built in 1582 with a Gothic timber frame door. Before that there was already a chapel there. The church was named after a martyr from the early 4th century. On the church square, a walk-in labyrinth is embedded in the pavement, which is a somewhat reduced representation of the labyrinth from the cathedral in Chartes. Since May 2005, the Evangelical Church Community of Zazenhausen, together with the neighboring communities of Rot, Freiberg and Mönchfeld, has formed the Evangelical General Church Community of Himmelsleiter, which got its name from an old designation.
Stuttgart-Botnang Evang.  Nicodemus Church 1.JPG Nicodemus Church Botnang 48 ° 46 ′ 32 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 54" E The church with community center and kindergarten was built in 1967 as the second preaching point of the Evangelical Church Congregation Botnang. It is located on Fleckenwaldweg in a residential area from the 1920s and 1930s. Another preaching point of the parish has been the Solitude Palace Church since 1966.
Weilimdorf - Town Hall and Oswald Church.jpg Oswald Church Weilimdorf 48 ° 48 ′ 58 "N, 9 ° 6 ′ 37" E Built in the 12th century by the Guelphs; The church received its present appearance in the 15th century (nave from 1472); Tower increased in 1595; valuable interior decoration (Entombment of Christ by Hans Seyfer). As a result of the strong growth of the community, new districts with their own churches (Wolfbuschkirche, Stephanuskirche Giebel and Dietrich-Bonhoeffer-Kirche) emerged around Weilimdorf in the 20th century, where independent parishes were established. However, together with the Oswald parish, these continue to form the overall Evangelical parish of Stuttgart-Weilimdorf.
Stuttgart Evang.  Paul-Gerhardt-Church 2.JPG Paul Gerhardt Church west 48 ° 46 ′ 35 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 51" E In 1926 a small church was built by the builder Zacharias Schäffer, which was almost completely destroyed in July 1944. The architect Paul Heim built today's Paul Gerhardt Church on the foundations of the old church in 1951. She received an organ from the Rensch company. A year later, the Paul-Gerhardt-Hof with community room, apartments, kindergarten, "Pfarrwitwenheim" and Brunnenhof was completed. Serenade concerts and community festivals take place here in summer. In 1976 the new Paul-Gerhardt-Hof was inaugurated.
Evang.  Pauluskirche Stuttgart-West - tower 2.JPG Pauluskirche west 48 ° 46 ′ 10 ″ N, 9 ° 9 ′ 1 ″ E The architect Theophil Frey built the Pauluskirche in neo-Gothic style for the rapidly growing West district in 1896–1898. The church was destroyed during World War II. After the war, the Paulus community initially found a place to stay in an emergency church on Leipziger Platz. In 1961 the new Pauluskirche was inaugurated. It was built according to plans by Heinz Rall and Hans Röper and has a 46 m high tower that overlooks the West district. Inside the modern complex, the concrete glass windows by Christian Oehler catch the eye. They show scenes from the Bible. The crucifix dates from around 1500. The Pauluskirche is also the host of the Eritrean community. The former Paulus Emergency Church on Leipziger Platz has since been handed over to the Greek Orthodox community.
Stuttgart Evang.  Pauluskirche Zuffenhausen 3.JPG Pauluskirche Zuffenhausen 48 ° 49 ′ 54 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 24" E The church was built from 1901 to 1903 for the rapidly growing population of Zuffenhausen on a small hill in the center of the village by the architect Dolmetsch, after the previous old church (today Johanneskirche) had become too small. The 49 m high tower has meanwhile become the emblem of the city district. After it was destroyed in the Second World War, it was rebuilt in different ways. The outer walls are made of ocher-colored brick in the style of late romanticism. There is a concrete glass window by Christian Oehler in the choir. In 1983/84 the interior was redesigned. The pictures and glass windows come from Willy Wiedmann , Stuttgart. He designed them in the style of his polycon painting . In 1990, a three-manual, fully mechanical Mühleisen grinder organ was installed. The Paulus community, which was separated from the Johanneskirche community in the 20th century, merged with this and the neighboring Michaelskirchengemeinde Neuwirtshaus to form the Evangelical Church Community of Zuffenhausen in 2000.
Evang.  Petruskirche Stuttgart-Gablenberg.jpg Petruskirche Gablenberg 48 ° 46 ′ 36 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 17" E The small hamlet of Gablenberg, which always belongs to Stuttgart, received a small church in the 18th century. A parish administration and later a parish of its own was set up for the place, which grew rapidly, especially in the 19th century. In 1900–02 the architect Theophil Frey (1845–1904) built a new church in neo-early Gothic style, which was named Petruskirche, in place of the old village church. The nave is a spanned hall structure with a cross vault, built from red Maulbronn sandstone with brick walls. The special thing about the church is that the worship room is on the upper floor. The choir windows were made by Prof. Rudolf Yelin the Elder. J. designed and show scenes from the life of Peter. The tower of the Petruskirche is 67.4 meters high, the tallest church tower in Stuttgart [1] .
S-Obertuerkheim Petruskirche.jpg Petruskirche Obertürkheim 48 ° 46 ′ 4 ″ N, 9 ° 16 ′ 9 ″ E In Obertürkheim, a pilgrimage chapel is documented for the first time in 1285. This was extended to a Gothic church in 1484 and a Protestant church in 1549. The special features of the church include the reticulated vault, a late Gothic statue of Peter and old grave tablets. The church is surrounded by a cemetery. In the 18th century the church was renewed. It received a slightly baroque interior. In 1927 the community built a second church, the Andreas Church. Both churches are thus preaching offices of the Evangelical Church Community Obertürkheim.
Stuttgart Evang.  Rosenbergkirche - Turm.JPG Rosenberg Church west 48 ° 46 ′ 32 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 54" E In 1908 a "traveling church" was set up in the rapidly growing West district, which had already been located elsewhere. A rapidly growing parish gathered in it until the Second World War. In 1943 the church was destroyed. Afterwards the services took place in the neighboring parish hall and finally in private apartments. In 1956, the architect Erwin Rohrberg built the new church on Rosenbergstrasse, a modern church building that has since received several awards. The church resembles a ship: the bell tower on the street is the mast, the roof laid in waves and the vaulted choir of the church building are the sails and the parabolic interior resembles a ship's bow. The church was furnished by leading Stuttgart artists (e.g. Rudolf Yelin , Ernst Yelin , Ulrich Henn ). In 2001 the Rosenberg parish merged with the neighboring memorial parish to form the new Evangelical Memorial and Rosenberg parish.

In 2012, the architects carried out a thorough renovation with alterations.

Solitude Palace Chapel Solitude 48 ° 47 ′ 13 "N, 9 ° 5 ′ 0" E Built 1764–1767 as a Catholic court chapel in the late baroque / early classicist style; Ceiling painting by Nicolas Guibal 1765/66. After the renovation in 1950 it was taken over by the Evangelical Church Community and has been used by the Evangelical Church Community of Botnang since 1966 .
Stuttgart-schlosskapelle.jpg Castle church in the old castle center 48 ° 46 ′ 36 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 45" E Built 1558-62 by the master builder Aberlin Tretsch as the first and third new Protestant church in Württemberg (after the Neuburg castle chapel on the Danube in 1543 and the Torgau castle chapel in 1544) as a transverse church with ground-level community access in the arcade courtyard and access from the ducal apartments on the Gallery. In the spirit of Protestant understanding, the altar and pulpit should be easily visible from all places and were therefore designed centrally as cult objects of equal value. They were designed by Sem Schlör . By the way, Duke Christoph sent his brother-in-law Margrave Georg Friedrich the Elder in 1563 . Ä. to Brandenburg, the master builder Aberlin Tretsch zur Plassenburg near Kulmbach, who then influenced the planning of the castle church, which, like its Stuttgart model, was built as a transept church. After the parish moved in in 1806, the Stuttgart Palace Church was redesigned in a neo-Gothic style by Alexander Tritschler and a crypt was laid out in which King Karl, Queen Olga, Duke Wilhelm Eugen, Duchess Wera and Carl Eugen are buried. The church also served as a library and pharmacy at times. In 1865 they were renovated inside. Today it serves as a preaching point for the Evangelical Abbey Community and is often used for wedding celebrations.
Evang.  Sommerrainkirche Stuttgart 2.JPG Sommerrainkirche Sommerrain 48 ° 49 ′ 4 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 40" E A separate church was built in 1966 for the Sommerrain district, which was built in the 1930s. The church designed by the architect Heinz Rall has a needle-shaped, 36 m high tower and was inaugurated on May 15, 1966. In addition to the church service room, the church premises also have a community hall, kindergarten, pastor's apartment and various group rooms. In 1989 the parish of Sommerrain became independent, after the parishioners had previously belonged to the Wichern parish, but it is still part of the overall evangelical parish of Bad Cannstatt.
Stuttgart Evang.  City Church Bad Cannstatt.JPG Town church Bad Cannstatt Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 19 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 51" E The church was built in 1471–1506 by Aberlin Jörg d. Ä. built as a three-aisled hall church in late Gothic style. The Renaissance-style tower was built by Heinrich Schickhardt in 1613 . The church stands on the foundations of a stone church built on this site in the 9th century. Since the ground plan of these foundations is identical to that of the Einhard basilica (Steinbach) near Michelstadt in the Odenwald and Einhard was the architect of Charlemagne and the Cannstatter church was built next to a Carolingian royal court, it is assumed that Einhard also built the Cannstatter church and the Order from Charlemagne came. After the church was destroyed, it was rebuilt in the 11th century in the form of an early Romanesque basilica. Presumably that church was already dedicated to the martyrs Cosmas and Damian. The second church was destroyed in the 13th century, rebuilt and then rebuilt in Gothic style by Aberlin Jörg. The church suffered in the Second World War, but was the only one of the four large Gothic churches in the city to remain undamaged and preserved in its Gothic style. The fittings include the Gothic tracery in the choir vault, the crucifix from the 16th century, the font with a jug and bowl donated by Duchess Antonia in 1656, the wall paintings by Rudolf Yelin the Elder. Ä. as well as windows by Wolf-Dieter Kohler should be mentioned. The church is the seat of the dean's office in Bad Cannstatt. The associated parish is part of the Evangelical General Parish of Bad Cannstatt.
Stadtkirche-Untertuerkheim.jpg City Church of St. Germanus Untertürkheim 48 ° 46 '46 "N, 9 ° 15' 8" E The church was built in 1478 and rebuilt in Gothic style in 1493/94. It was destroyed in 1634 and rebuilt in 1654–56. The tower was given the octagonal bell storey. In the middle of the 18th and at the beginning of the 19th century, St. Germanus had to be renovated due to disrepair, now the choir has been replaced with a rectangular extension. The renewed reconstruction in 1968–1972 by the architects Ellsässer and Keller radically changed the interior of the church: the nave was divided into a parish hall and a room for worship. The showpiece is the sliding wall between these two rooms, which is decorated with 36 linocuts from the Old Testament Joseph story by HAP Grieshaber .
During the renovation, baroque wall paintings from around 1660 were uncovered. The colorful pictures show the apostles and the personifications of the seven virtues. Ulrich Henn designed the interior with gravestones. Finds such as pottery, glass, stove tiles and other everyday objects that came to light during excavations are located in the former ossuary under the church.
A curiosity is an oil painting, the “Untertürkheim Sermon on the Mount”, in which the Untertürkheim painter Carl Schmauk drew 22 local citizens and wine growers. The church is named after the Parisian bishop St. Germain, who had a "branch office" set up in Untertürkheim.
Stuttgart Evang.  City church Feuerbach.JPG City Church of St. Mauritius Feuerbach 48 ° 48 ′ 26 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 28" E First mentioned in a document in 1075; today's building as a hall church from 1789/90, instead of an old small wooden church; The interior was remodeled between 1907 and 1934 and 1985 and renovated in 2001. In 1953 three church windows by Wolf-Dieter Kohler were installed in the choir. His father Walter Kohler had designed the resurrection window in the tower chapel as early as 1934. In 1983 the church received a new organ from Rohlfs. In the course of the growth of the Feuerbach parish, the Luther, Föhrich and Gustav Werner parishes were separated as independent parishes in the 20th century. Since January 1, 2005, all four parishes have again formed the Evangelical Church Community of Feuerbach.
Stuttgart-Vaihingen Evang.  City Church 2.JPG City Church of St. Blaise Vaihingen 48 ° 43 '57 "N, 9 ° 6' 36" E The town church of Vaihingen dates from the 13th century. The sacristy and choir date from the 15th century, the original nave from 1590. However, this was demolished in the 19th century and rebuilt in the neo-Gothic style in 1858 by the architect Christian Friedrich von Leins. In 1934 the community received a late medieval panel from the Lower Rhine school depicting the crucifixion. A keystone in the choir vault shows a broken wheel, the coat of arms of Vaihingen, which indicates that the place belonged to the Esslingen Catherine's Hospital for almost 500 years. Although Vaihingen never had city rights, the main church is now called the city church. In 1960 the Trinity Church was built as a further church; later the Ostgemeindehaus, the Oberlinhaus and the Ecumenical Center Pfaffenwald were added. The Evangelical Church Community Stuttgart-Vaihingen thus has a total of five preaching positions.
Gaisburg-schaller-haerling.jpg Gaisburg parish church Gaisburg 48 ° 47 '9 "N, 9 ° 13' 4" E From 1140 Hirsau monks operated a vineyard in Gaisburg and presumably preached there in a chapel dedicated to St. Barbara. This was replaced by a larger building in 1584. The baptismal font of this church has been preserved. But this church became too small. This is how one of the most elegant churches in the greater Stuttgart area was built in 1910–13. The architect Martin Elsaesser created a church in a mixture of Art Nouveau, Neoclassicism and Neo-Baroque with 16 Ionic columns that support the oval of the dome. After the destruction in World War II, the church was rebuilt and renovated from 1976 on. It is equipped with a monumental wall painting by the Stuttgart artist Käte Schaller-Härlin (1877–1973) on the altar wall, in the foyer you can see evidence of the medieval previous church (4 large figures and a group of apostles from a late Gothic altar from 1520 / Stuttgart School or Esslingen School). Another outstanding cultural monument is the three-part Weigle organ from 1913 , originally designed in a late romantic style . From the tower that is accessible, there is an excellent panoramic view of the Neckar valley. The congregation has been part of the Stuttgart congregation since 1903.
Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt - Evang.  Steigkirche 1.JPG Steigkirche Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 42 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 38" E The Steigkirche was built in 1928, but it was destroyed in the Second World War. The current church on the Steig was built in 1966 as part of a modern community center. The new district Burgholzhof also belongs to the community. The Ecumenical Center Burgholzhof was opened here on February 22nd, 2000 together with the Catholic parish of St. Rupert. The Steiggemeinde belongs to the Evangelical General Church Community of Bad Cannstatt.
Evang.  Church Stuttgart-Steinhaldenfeld.JPG Steinhaldenfeldkirche Steinhaldenfeld 48 ° 49 ′ 41 ″ N, 9 ° 13 ′ 53 ″ E An evangelical church was built in 1934 for the part of town that was built in the early 1930s. The associated parish is part of the Evangelical General Parish of Bad Cannstatt.
Evang.  Stephanuskirche Bad Cannstatt.JPG Stephanuskirche Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 45 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 1" E After the Second World War, a Protestant congregation has been gathering in the Karl-Hartenstein-Haus since 1953, which in addition to the parish hall also includes a kindergarten and a rectory. In March 1957, the congregation was raised to an independent Stephanus congregation. This was able to build its own church in 1960. The architects were Heinz Rall and Hans Röper. They designed a simple church in the shape of a tent, with colored concrete glass windows and a slim concrete tower next to it. The Stephanus parish belongs to the Evangelical General Church Parish Bad Cannstatt.
Stuttgart-Dürrlewang Evang.  Stephanuskirche 2.JPG Stephanuskirche Dürrlewang 48 ° 42 ′ 59 "N, 9 ° 7 ′ 7" E For the Dürrlewang district, built in the early 1960s, a church was built in 1965 by the architect Wolf Irion, with concrete and glass on the outside and wood on the inside. 1996–1998 interior renovation by Horst Nanz and Hammeley in collaboration with the artist Bernhard Huber. The sanctuary was moved more into the middle, thus taking up the character of the building's tent-shaped arrangement with rows of seats. Now there is a carved baptismal font.
Stuttgart ev Stephanuskirche 01.jpg Stephanuskirche gable 48 ° 48 '22 "N, 9 ° 5' 23" E After the old Oswald Church and the Wolfbusch Church built in 1938, a third church, the Stephanuskirche, was built in the Giebel district by the architect Wilhelm Tiedje in 1957 for the rapidly growing Protestant parish of Weilimdorf, and soon afterwards it was raised to an independent parish, which includes Giebel as well as the Districts Bergheim and Hausen belong. In Hausen, however, there is its own wooden church, the Jakobuskirche, in which services are also regularly held. The Stephanus church community still belongs to the Evangelical General Church Community Stuttgart-Weilimdorf.
Stiftskirche stuttgart.jpg Collegiate Church Stuttgart center 48 ° 46 ′ 36 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 41" E The main Protestant church in the center of the city is the only monument from the Staufer era in Stuttgart. With its two unequal towers, it is one of the landmarks of Stuttgart. The first construction period dates back to around 1170, after which it was changed several times. Heavily destroyed in the Second World War and then rebuilt in a simplified manner. After four years of renovation, the collegiate church was consecrated again on July 13, 2003.
Stuttgart-Kaltental Evang.  Thomas Church 1.JPG Thomas Church Kaltental 48 ° 44 ′ 29 "N, 9 ° 7 ′ 40" E The place Kaltental has always belonged to Vaihingen. In 1887 a prayer hall was built, in 1889 the place received a parish administration and in 1899 its own pastor. In 1930 the architects Mayer, Eckert and Seytter finally built the Thomaskirche. It was partially destroyed in World War II, but rebuilt in 1950. In 1969 a separate church, the Dachswald Church, was built for the Dachswald settlement. Today it is the second preaching position of the Thomaskirche community.
Stuttgart Uffkirche Bad Cannstatt 2.JPG Uff Church Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 '17 "N, 9 ° 13' 35" E Once the church “To our dear women” (today the cemetery church); built in late Gothic style; around 1500 reconstruction of the church. Outside and inside epitaphs (memorial plaques with an inscription for a deceased) from the Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque periods. On the north facade one of the most important Renaissance epitaphs in Württemberg for the Mayor of Cannstatt, Jakob Speidel (1538–1613).
S-Muehlhausen-Veitskapelle.jpg St. Vitus Chapel Mulhouse 48 ° 50 ′ 21 ″ N, 9 ° 13 ′ 20 ″ E The church was built in 1380 in Gothic style and has been preserved almost unchanged. In terms of art history, it is the most important church in Stuttgart, named after the national saint of Bohemia, Saint Veit (291 to 303), whose life is recorded in frescoes from 1428 on the walls. There is also the medieval sculpture of the Maria-Swoon group, a high altar from 1510 with the Saints Vitus, Wenceslaus, Sigismund, Hippolyt and Modestus and tombs of the local lords from the 16th century. Today the church is the parish church of the Evangelical parish in Mühlhausen. The former parish church, the Walpurgis Church, built in 1488, was destroyed in 1943 and then not rebuilt. In the meantime, however, a modern community center has been incorporated or attached to the tower ruins.
Stuttgart-Büsnau Evang.  Church 2.JPG Church of Reconciliation Büsnau 48 ° 45 ′ 2 "N, 9 ° 4 ′ 45" E A church was built in 1957 by the architect Irion for the Büsnau district, which was built in the 1930s. It is a simple brick building. Before that, the congregation celebrated its services in private apartments and at school. The large tower window from 1994 shows the "golden city - the new Jerusalem".
Stuttgart-Degerloch Evang.  Church of Reconciliation 2.JPG Church of Reconciliation Degerloch 48 ° 44 ′ 55 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 55" E The church on Löwenplatz in the east of Degerloch was built according to plans by Adolf and Hans Bregler and inaugurated on November 27, 1960. It stands on a square floor plan. The roof rises from the entrance towards the chancel and carries a ridge turret. The window above the altar was aligned so that sunlight falls on the altar in the morning. In front of the church is a marble column by the artist Elmar Daucher.
Stuttgart Evang.  Forest Church.JPG Forest Church North 48 ° 47 ′ 5 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 54" E The church was built in 1928 by the architect Artur Bossert as an excursion and wedding church. It is a small hall building with a right-angled extension. The apse painting comes from the Hölzel student Bruno May and shows the mountain Golgotha. In 1959 the church received an extension from the architect Hannes Mayer. The relief decorations on the pulpit, the altar and the baptismal font were made by the sculptor Helmuth Uhrig . In the meantime, the memorial community, to which the forest church belonged, had grown so large that in 1961 the independent forest church community was separated.
Stuttgart-Untertürkheim Evang.  Wallmerkirche 1.JPG Wallmer Church Untertürkheim 48 ° 47 ′ 7 ″ N, 9 ° 15 ′ 3 ″ E For the Wallmersiedlung in Untertürkheim from the 1920s, building officer Dr. W. Zoller the Wallmerkirche with choir windows, altar cross and tapestries by Rudolf Yelin the Elder . J. built by the Stuttgart Art Academy. It is a compact building with a sacred space and group rooms under one roof. The Wallmerkirche is one of the four preaching offices of the Protestant parish of Untertürkheim.
Evang.  Wichernkirche Bad Cannstatt.JPG Wichernkirche Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 36 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 56" E The church was built in the 1930s and consecrated on October 10, 1937. It was named after the founder of the "Inner Mission", Johann Hinrich Wichern . The church did not have a tower, but only a roof turret as a bell chamber. In 1939 the Wicherngemeinde became independent. But today it still belongs to the Evangelical Church Community of Bad Cannstatt. In 1976 the church received an extension with a parish hall, club room, kitchen and kindergarten. The district of Sommerrain also belonged to the municipality, but a separate church was built there in 1966 and an independent parish was founded in 1989.
Weilimdorf Wolfbusch Church by-RaBoe 01.jpg Wolfbusch Church Wolf bush 48 ° 48 ′ 25 ″ N, 9 ° 6 ′ 19 ″ E For the rapidly growing population of Weilimdorf, the Wolfbuschsiedlung was built from 1933 and with it from 1937 also the Wolfbusch Church. It was consecrated on March 20, 1938, but was badly damaged by bombing raids in 1944 and 1945 during the Second World War and rebuilt after the war. It was re-consecrated in 1947. In 1953, new stained glass windows by Wolf-Dieter Kohler were installed. They represent the Passion story of Christ according to the Gospel of John. On January 1, 1966, the Wolfbusch parish became legally independent through separation from the Oswald parish, but it still belongs to the Evangelical General Parish of Stuttgart-Weilimdorf.
Chapel of the Evangelical Youth Organization center 48 ° 46 ′ 36 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 10" E

Evangelical Free Churches

Seventh-day Adventists

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Advent house Bad Cannstatt
Kissinger Strasse
48 ° 48 '9 "N, 9 ° 13' 38" E 1954 The Bad Cannstatt Adventist Church was founded in 1894. There is also an Italian community in the same building.
Advent house Middle of
Firnhaberstraße
48 ° 46 ′ 37 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 14" E 1954 The community was founded in 1893.
Advent house East
Rieckestrasse
48 ° 47 '24 "N, 9 ° 11' 51" E South Slavic Adventist Church
Advent house West
Lindenspürstrasse
48 ° 46 ′ 42 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 45" E South Slavic Adventist Church

Evangelical Free Churches

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Bethel Church Stuttgart.jpg Bethel Church West
forest road
1963 The church was built as a branch church of the Zuffenhausen Baptist community. In 1986 the associated community became independent.
Christ Church Stuttgart-Feuerbach.jpg Christ Church Feuerbach 48 ° 48 ′ 45 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 45" E 1954/55 The Stuttgart Baptist Congregation was founded in 1837. In 1899 the community was able to build its first church in Silberburgstrasse , but this church was destroyed in the Second World War.
EfA municipality Stuttgart.jpg Gospel for all Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 49 ′ 8 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 54" E 2010
Martin Luther King Church Zuffenhausen 48 ° 50 ′ 2 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 53" E 1958
International Baptist Church Vaihingen 48 ° 43 ′ 51 ″ N, 9 ° 5 ′ 2 ″ E The community was founded by members of the American armed forces in Stuttgart. The first contacts were made in 1957 in the form of Bible studies. In 1960 the group called itself "Neckar Valley Baptist Mission". In 1962 the "Neckar Valley Baptist Church" emerged from this. The congregation first celebrated its services in temporary rooms in Vaihingen until, from 1964, it found a new home for many years with the Baptist congregation in Sindelfingen. In 1986 the congregation purchased a plot of land for a place of worship in Vaihingen near the "Patch Barracks". A year later the church was renamed "International Baptist Church of Stuttgart" (IBC). In 1988/89 the church with community center was built.

Methodist Church

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Stuttgart methodists view800x766 guntherseibold.jpg Church of the Resurrection center 48 ° 46 ′ 19 ″ N, 9 ° 10 ′ 24 ″ E Inaugurated in 1879. It was canceled at the end of March 2013.
Bethesda Chapel center 48 ° 46 ′ 20 "N, 9 ° 11 ′ 16" E The Bethesda Hospital and with it the chapel have a long tradition. The hospital goes back to the Bethesda Sisterhood founded in Wuppertal in 1886. In Stuttgart, work began in 1896 initially in home nursing. Villa Mohl, acquired in 1910, was converted into a hospital and went into operation on January 31, 1912. The hospital chapel, which was redesigned in November 2001, was also built during the 1960–1967 expansion.
Bad Cannstatt Christ Church.jpg Christ Church Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 '23 "N, 9 ° 13' 8" E The church was built in the middle of the 19th century.
Christ Church Muenster 48 ° 49 ′ 25 ″ N, 9 ° 13 ′ 8 ″ E New building; The church belongs to the municipality of Bad Cannstatt
Christ Church Weilimdorf 48 ° 48 ′ 38 "N, 9 ° 7 ′ 7" E The community was founded in 1860 as a branch of Ludwigsburg. In 1922 the community was separated and independently and a community hall was built in Solitudestrasse. The community hall was damaged in the Second World War, but was soon rebuilt. In 1959/61 the new Christ Church was finally built on Deidesheimer Strasse. The church was completely renovated in 1984.
Stuttgart Evang.-meth.  Church in Zuffenhausen.JPG Christ Church Zuffenhausen 48 ° 49 ′ 49 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 25" E
Friedenskirche Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 31 ″ N, 9 ° 13 ′ 14 ″ E
Friedenskirche Feuerbach 48 ° 48 '36 "N, 9 ° 9' 26" E
Friedenskirche Sillenbuch 48 ° 44 ′ 33 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 40" E The community center on Liliencronstrasse was built in 1975 and expanded in the early 1990s. The community belongs to the resurrection community Stuttgart-Mitte.
Hope Church (formerly Zionskirche) west 48 ° 46 ′ 30 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 56" E The community was founded in 1849. The original Zionskirche was built in 1955? built after the old church was destroyed in World War II. In 2010 the parishes of the Church of Zion and the Church of the Resurrection were merged and merged into the Church of Hope. The Bethesda Chapel also belongs to the Church of Hope.
Pauluskirche Vaihingen 48 ° 44 ′ 3 ″ N, 9 ° 6 ′ 40 ″ E The Zionskapelle Möhringen also belongs to the community.
Evgl.-meth. church Cheeks 48 ° 46 ′ 21 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 28" E The municipality of Wangen belongs to the municipality of Fellbach.
Zion Chapel Möhringen 48 ° 43 ′ 19 ″ N, 9 ° 8 ′ 45 ″ E The chapel belongs to the Paulus Congregation Vaihingen.

Free Evangelical Churches

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Count House Middle of
Kornbergstrasse
48 ° 47 '2 "N, 9 ° 9' 45" E

Other free churches

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Apostolic Community - Congregation Stuttgart.JPG Apostolic Congregation West
Schwabstrasse
apostolic The first Reformed Apostolic church services took place from 1929 onwards, with support from the Vogtland. There have been weekly house groups since 1949. The current church building has been in use since the 1980s.
Gospel Forum Feuerbach
Junghansstrasse
neo-charismatic 2001 largest new church building in Germany with a capacity of 2200 seats.
Mosaic Church South
Roman road
evangelical - charismatic The Mosaik Church Stuttgart is part of the Christian Ecclesia e. V.
Friedenskirche Bad Cannstatt Church of the Nazarene
Hope Stuttgart West
Vogelsangstrasse
Immanuelskirche Stuttgart.jpg Immanuelsgemeinde east Lutheran
Catholic Apostle  Municipality of Stuttgart.JPG Catholic apostol. local community West
Gutenbergstrasse
catholic apostol.

Catholic churches

Old Catholic Church

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Stuttgart-st-katharina.jpg St. Catherine Stuttgart
Katharinenplatz / Olgastraße
48 ° 46 '22 "N, 9 ° 11' 1" E 1868 Architect Heinrich Wagner , as a simple neo-Gothic church. It serves the old Catholic community and the Anglican community , which are in church fellowship with one another, as a parish church - hence also called the "English Church".

Roman Catholic churches

The more than 50 Catholic churches in Stuttgart belong to a total of 42 parishes in 12 total parishes, which means that individual parishes also have several churches. The parishes together form the Catholic city ​​dean of Stuttgart . This consisted of the four deaneries Stuttgart-Mitte, Stuttgart-Nord, Stuttgart-Filder and Bad Cannstatt. These were abolished in the course of the deanery reform of the Rottenburg-Stuttgart diocese , so that since then there has only been the city deanery in the area of ​​the city of Stuttgart.

In the following, the church buildings are listed alphabetically, starting with the main Catholic church of the city, the St. Eberhard Cathedral. A large number are classified under St. for Santa.

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Stuttgart-st eberhard.jpg St. Eberhard Cathedral Stuttgart-center 48 ° 46 '47 "N, 9 ° 10' 48" E 1955 The church, built by architect Nikolaus Friedrich von Thouret between 1808 and 1811 , was the first Catholic church in what was then Stuttgart after the Reformation (the oldest in today's urban area, however, is in Hofen); In 1944 the church was destroyed by a bomb attack. The reconstruction took place 1953–1955 by the architect Hugo Schlösser .
The interior is dominated by the altarpiece The Coming Lord by Otto Habel , there is also a gold-plated Pietà and, since 1982, an Albiez organ, the second largest church musical instrument in Stuttgart after the new organ of the Protestant collegiate church. On September 30, 1978, the church was elevated to a co-cathedral of the Rottenburg-Stuttgart diocese . Since then the diocese has had its current name.
Asemwald Chapel Asem Forest 48 ° 43 ′ 29 "N, 9 ° 11 ′ 33" E It is an ecumenical community center that is also used for Catholic services. The community gathering there belongs to the community of St. Antonius von Padua Hohenheim.
Stuttgart-Vaihingen Catholic Christ-King Church.JPG Christ King Vaihingen 48 ° 43 '50 "N, 9 ° 7' 6" E 1928 A prayer house for the Catholic community was built in Vaihingen as early as 1902. The current church was built in 1928 by architect Alfred Schmidt. The church of expressionist church architecture has a Zollinger roof with a lamellar barrel vault.
Stuttgart-Botnang Kath. Christ Redeemer Church.JPG Christ Redeemer Botnang 48 ° 46 '52 "N, 9 ° 7' 57" E 1971 The church was built in 1971 by architect Laihle as the second Catholic church in Botnang after the Church of St. Clemens built in 1933.
Holy Spirit Church Stuttgart-Ost.jpg Holy Spirit Stuttgart-East 48 ° 47 ′ 16 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 52" E 1976 The exposed concrete building was built from 1974 to 1976 according to plans by Rainer L. Neusch . It is a community center with an integrated church. The church space can be enlarged by opening a folding wall with the parish hall.

The design of the chancel and bronze work (portals, cross, tabernacle) were made by the sculptor Gerhard Tagwerker. The outer cross, abstract stations of the cross and windows were created by Gudrun Müsse-Florin. Late Gothic Madonna around 1480. Predecessor buildings from 1930 (previously the emergency church of St. Georg, destroyed in 1944) and 1946/47.

Herz-Jesu-Kirche (Stuttgart), 012.jpg Heart of jesus Stuttgart-Gaisburg 48 ° 46 ′ 52 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 45" E 1934 The mighty, travertine-clad church building with a free-standing campanile was built in two sections in 1921 and 1934 according to plans by Clemens Hummel . The nave is 54 m long, the main nave 14 m high, the side aisles 5 m each. The exterior is modeled on early Christian basilicas. The choir is raised and windowless; it received its current appearance during the interior renovation 1954–1958; the interior is characterized by its frescoes created by Wilhelm Geyer . Otto Herbert Hajek designed the choir room and made the altar, tabernacle, ambo and lectern . Wilhelm Geyer also created the colored windows in the side aisles and in the so-called “children's chapel” to the right of the choir room (1954/55). The church has a statue of the Virgin Mary that is dated around 1430. On the gallery above the main entrance is the organ of the Rieger workshop from 1979 with 35 stops on three manuals and pedal.
Stuttgart-Sommerrain Holy Cross Church.jpg Holy Cross Church (Sommerrain) Sommerrain 48 ° 48 ′ 57 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 37" E 1998 The new building of the Holy Cross Church was consecrated on March 29, 1998. It was designed and planned by the architect Wolfgang Liese-Grässer while retaining the old tower; Bernhard Huber carried out the artificial glazing. Rudolf Kurz designed the chancel.
Stuttgart Hajek-13-06-he 025.jpg Holy Brother Klaus von Flüe Stuttgart-East 48 ° 46 ′ 16 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 11" E 1969 The church was built in 1969, the architect was Karl Hans Neumann . In 2006 the interior was renovated and redesigned by the architects Kreuz + Kreuz, Stuttgart.
View over the Ufffriedhof.jpg Church of Our Lady Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 13 "N, 9 ° 13 ′ 36" E 1948 The church was built in 1907-1909 by Joseph Cades ; it is an unplastered neo-Gothic brick building based on French models. Built in the vicinity of the Uff churchyard and church, it resumes their patronage; The church was badly damaged in 1944 and rebuilt in 1948.
Stuttgart-Büsnau Kath. St. Maria Kirche.JPG Mary Queen of Peace Büsnau 48 ° 45 ′ 7 ″ N, 9 ° 5 ′ 2 ″ E 1954 The church was built in 1954 by the architect Müller.
Stuttgart-Degerloch Catholic Church of the Assumption.JPG Assumption Day Degerloch 48 ° 44 ′ 58 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 25" E 1927 The church was built in 1927 by the architect Hugo Schlösser . As part of the fundraising for the building, it was also called the Mountain Church of the Assumption of Mary.
Church of the Annunciation, S-Frauenkopf.jpg Annunciation Woman head 48 ° 45 '38 "N, 9 ° 13' 1" E 1970 The church was built in 1970. It has not been used since Christmas 2004, the district was much smaller than originally planned, so the number of Catholics there was also lower. In May 2007 the church on the Stuttgart Frauenkopf gave home to an Ethiopian Orthodox community.
Stuttgart-Vaihingen Catholic Church Maximilian Kolbe.JPG Maximilian Kolbe Vaihingen 48 ° 44 '11 "N, 9 ° 6' 3" E 1978 The church was built in 1978
Stuttgart kat Salvator 01.jpg Salvator Gable , Weilimdorf district 48 ° 48 '15 "N, 9 ° 5' 24" E 1957 The church was built between 1955 and 1957 by the church architects Hans Herkommer and Jörg Herkommer. The concrete skeleton construction with a prestressed concrete ceiling is an early example of the Expressionist church building of the 1950s. In 1960 she was elevated to a parish church .
St Albert Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen.jpg St. Albert Zuffenhausen 48 ° 50 ′ 23 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 47" E The church is a branch church of the parish of St. Antonius of Padua Zuffenhausen and is used by the St. Petrus Society.
Stuttgart-Kaltental Kath. St. Antoniuskirche.JPG St. Anthony Stuttgart-South, Kaltental 48 ° 44 ′ 27 "N, 9 ° 7 ′ 54" E The church was built in 1932 by architect Hans Herkommer and rebuilt in 2006 by architect Günter Pfeifer , the interior was redesigned. The sculptor Madeleine Dietz was commissioned to design the central liturgical locations.
Markgröninger Strasse 29 Sankt Antoniuskirche Zuffenhausen.jpg St. Anthony Zuffenhausen 48 ° 49 ′ 59 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 18" E 1903 The Catholics in Zuffenhausen initially belonged to the Ludwigsburg community. In the 1890s a branch church was founded. In 1902/03 the community was able to build its own church based on a design by Ulrich Pohlhammer .
Stuttgart-Hohenheim Catholic St. Antonius Church.JPG St. Anthony of Padua Hohenheim 48 ° 42 ′ 33 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 20" E 1962 The church was built in 1961/62. The interior was rebuilt in 1998/99. The parish also includes the Asemwald Ecumenical Community Center and, until 2017, the Vinzenz Pallotti Church in Birkach
St. Augustine Regret 48 ° 49 '52 "N, 9 ° 13' 50" E 1974 The church was built in 1974.
S-Hofen St Barbara Church.jpg St. Barbara Hofen 48 ° 50 ′ 16 "N, 9 ° 13 ′ 42" E 1784 The church was built in 1783–1784 by master builder Michael Bader on behalf of the cathedral chapter of Constance. It was later expanded in the Baroque and Rococo styles. This makes it the oldest Catholic church in the city of Stuttgart. Pilgrimages to the “Stuttgart Madonna” (Ulm School, around 1500) have been officially organized since 1954.
Sankt Bonifatius Steinhaldenfeld.jpg St. Boniface Steinhaldenfeld 48 ° 49 ′ 44 "N, 9 ° 13 ′ 22" E 1935 The church was built in 1935. In April 1943 the nave was badly damaged in an air raid, the tower remained largely intact. The rebuilt church was elevated to a parish church in 1959. In 1965 the Catholic parish of Steinhaldenfeld built a second church, St. Thomas. The church life of the congregation shifted more and more to the church of St. Thomas over the years, but the congregation is still named after St. Boniface. The Church of St. Boniface is no longer used by the Catholic community itself, but has been made available to the Bulgarian Orthodox community.
Stuttgart-Botnang Kath. St. Clemenskirche.JPG St. Clement Botnang 48 ° 46 ′ 30 "N, 9 ° 7 ′ 47" E 1933 The church was built in 1933 by the architect Hugo Schlösser. The simple, single-aisle building with a gable roof is a reform architecture , independent of the Bauhaus and the forms of neoclassicism. In 1958 the church was elevated to a parish church. In 1971 a second church, Christ the Redeemer, was built in Botnang.
Sankt Christopherus S-Cheeks.jpg St. Christopher Cheeks 48 ° 46 ′ 33 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 37" E 1936 The church was built in 1936 by the architect Hummel and has been a parish church since 1951.
St Elisabeth Stuttgart-West.JPG St. Elisabeth Stuttgart-West 48 ° 46 '27 "N, 9 ° 9" 19 "E 1901 The church was built from May 1900 to November 1901 by architect Joseph Cades (1855-1943) as a neo-Romanesque basilica (brick building), partly based on the French Gothic. With a total length of 55 m, a transept width of 26 m, a height of the nave of 16 m, the church has 850 seats and is one of the largest Catholic churches in Stuttgart. The tower has a height of 44.00 m. It was partially destroyed in the Second World War. The reconstruction by architect Fred Hummel took place until 1968. The new choir windows were created in 1964 by Karl Josef Huber . Main altar by sculptor Alfred Appenzeller. Other works in the church are by Gebhard Fugel (altarpiece of the Holy Family, 1903, Way of the Cross, 1917, three-winged Sacred Heart, 1919). The organ, built in 1957 by the Rieger company, has four manuals and 55 registers. In 1988/89 the church was built by Dipl.-Ing. Matthias Kreuz and Dr.-Ing. Eva-Maria Kreuz from Stuttgart renovated inside. The parish of St. Elisabeth, founded in 1901 as a daughter parish of St. Maria, is one of the largest parishes in the Rottenburg-Stuttgart diocese.
Sankt Fidelis S-West.jpg St. Fidelis Stuttgart-West 48 ° 46 ′ 52 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 56" E 1925 The church was built in 1925 by the architect Clemens Hummel as a three-aisled transeptless truss building with a coffered wooden barrel ceiling and plastic decoration by the sculptor Josef Zeitler . In 1964/65 it was redesigned by the architect Rudolf Schwarz . The organ work (III + P / 44) was built in 2005 by the Orgelbau Vleugels workshop .
Stuttgart-Obertürkheim Kath. St. Franziskuskirche.JPG St. Francis Obertürkheim 48 ° 46 ′ 4 ″ N, 9 ° 16 ′ 0 ″ E 1926 The church was built by Lindner in 1926 as a so-called “emergency church”. In 1951, today's church was rebuilt.
Stuttgart-North St Georg.jpg St. George Stuttgart-North 48 ° 47 ′ 49 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 56" E 1929 For the Catholics in the north of Stuttgart, a prayer room was built in 1902 on Kleinstrasse. In 1914 a small wooden church followed, which was consecrated to St. George. The parishioners still belonged to St. Eberhard at that time. In 1921 the parish of St. George was established. In 1929/30, architect Hugo Schlösser was finally able to build today's church as a clinker brick building. The massive structure is known to every driver who drives into the city from the north on Heilbronner Strasse.
Stuttgart-Möhringen Catholic St. Hedwig Church.JPG St. Hedwig Möhringen 48 ° 43 '56 "N, 9 ° 8' 59" E 1953 The church was built in 1953 by the architect Müller and raised to parish church in 1959.
Johanneskirche Untertuerkheim.JPG St. John Evangelist Untertürkheim 48 ° 47 ′ 6 "N, 9 ° 15 ′ 12" E 1909 The church was built in 1903 by architect Joseph Cades and made a parish church in 1912. In 2003 a renovated romantic organ by the Biberach organ builder Johann Baptist Schefold from 1889 was installed.
Stuttgart St Johannes Maria Vianney.JPG St. John Maria Vianney Mönchfeld 48 ° 50 ′ 33 "N, 9 ° 13 ′ 17" E 1962 The church was built in 1962 and made a parish church.
St. Joseph Feuerbach 48 ° 48 ′ 32 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 47" E 1965 The church was built in 1895 and destroyed in World War II. The current church was built in 1965. In 1973 the second Catholic church in Feuerbach, St. Monika, was built.
Sankt Josef S-Heslach.jpg St. Joseph Heslach 48 ° 45 ′ 32 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 27" E 1975 The church was built in 1909 and made a parish church in 1920. However, the current church was rebuilt in 1975. The boys' choir Collegium Iuvenum was based here until 2007 .
Stuttgart St Konrad.jpg St. Conrad Stuttgart-center 48 ° 46 ′ 25 "N, 9 ° 11 ′ 26" E 1967 The church was built in 1967 and made a parish church in 1969.
St. Laurence Freiberg 48 ° 50 ′ 10 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 16" E 1973 The church was built in 1973 and made a parish church in 1974.
ChurchStMariaStuttgart07JUL2014.jpg St. Mary Stuttgart-center 48 ° 46 ′ 12 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 19" E 1879 The church was built in 1871–1879 by the architect Joseph von Egle based on the model of the early Gothic Elisabethenkirche in Marburg an der Lahn. After the Cathedral of St. Eberhard, it was the second Catholic parish church of the then royal residence city of Stuttgart. From today's perspective, this Marienkirche south of the city center represents the first new building of a Catholic church in Stuttgart's old Württemberg city ​​area after the Reformation that has been preserved in its architectural form after the St. Eberhard Cathedral was completely destroyed in World War II and in 1955 was rebuilt in a new form. The large church of St. Maria with two towers burned down in the Second World War in 1943, but was restored in its original form in 1948/49.
Sankt Paulus S-Hedelfingen.jpg St. Mark Hedelfingen 48 ° 45 ′ 36 "N, 9 ° 15 ′ 22" E 1978 The church was built in 1978 as an additional church for the Rohracker / Hedelfingen community. After their first church, the Pauluskirche in Rohracker, was no longer used by the Catholic community itself, the church community was renamed, which is now also named after St. Markus.
Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt Martinskirche 2.jpg St. Martinus Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 28 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 40" E 1950 Relocated here from Altenburg between 1511 and 1516 as the successor to the former early church; Re-inaugurated in 1858, destroyed in 1944 and rebuilt in 1950.
Sillenbuch St Michael Aussen 1280x1280 TuK Bassler 2018-01-25.jpg St. Michael Sillenbuch 48 ° 44 ′ 37 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 42" E 1953 The church was built in 1952/53 by architect Hans Herkommer. The interior of the hall was designed by the painter Wilhelm Geyer and the sculptor OH Hajek, among others.
St. Monika Feuerbach 48 ° 48 ′ 44 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 18" E 1973 The church was built in 1973 as the second Catholic church in Feuerbach, after the Church of St. Josef.
Nikolauskirche Stuttgart-Ost.jpg St. Nicholas Stuttgart-East 48 ° 47 '16 "N, 9 ° 11' 44" E 1969 The church was built in 1896–1899 by architect Pohlhammer. The church was destroyed in World War II and rebuilt until 1969.
St. Ottilia Muenster 48 ° 49 ′ 16 "N, 9 ° 13 ′ 11" E 1918 The church was built in 1913-1918 by the architects Edmund Capitain and Joseph Steiner. The two-wing complex, a basilica church, has brightly plastered facades and travertine structures, simple baroque shapes. The 1949 representation of Christ was made by the church painter Wilhelm Geyer .
St. Paul Stuttgart-South 48 ° 45 ′ 38 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 16" E 1975 The church is a branch church of the parish of St. Maria.
Stuttgart-Rohracker Kath. St. Pauluskirche 1.JPG St. Paul Rohracker 48 ° 45 ′ 32 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 8" E 1966 The church was built in 1966. In 1973 the church was elevated to a parish church after the Catholics had previously been cared for from Obertürkheim. In 1978 the community in Hedelfingen built a second church, the Markuskirche. In 2012 the church was closed. It has been used by Chaldean Catholic Christians from Iraq since 2014 .
Peterskirche Stuttgart.jpg St. Peter Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 21 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 39" E 1973 The church was built in 1973 and made a parish church. After around 40 years of existence, the building was in great need of renovation. The last service was celebrated on May 8, 2016, the church was profaned (“desecrated”) and demolished. The right-angled new building was consecrated on December 9, 2018.
Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt - Catholic Church St. Rupert 1.JPG St. Rupert Bad Cannstatt 48 ° 48 ′ 47 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 18" E 1962 The church was built in 1962 and made a parish church in 1965.
Stefanskirche Stuttgart-West.jpg St. Stefan Stuttgart-West 48 ° 46 ′ 16 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 39" E 1976 The former church was built in 1976. Profanation on December 30, 2017.
Stuttgart Sankt Theresia 2008 by-RaBoe.jpg St. Theresa of the Child Jesus Weilimdorf 48 ° 48 ′ 39 "N, 9 ° 6 ′ 56" E 1953 The church was built in 1953.
St-Thomas Stuttgart-Steinhaldenfeld.JPG St. Thomas Steinhaldenfeld 48 ° 49 ′ 35 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 6" E 1965 The church was built in 1965 as the second church for the Steinhaldenfeld district after the St. Bonifatius Church built in 1935.
St. Thomas More Hayload 48 ° 44 ′ 41 ″ N, 9 ° 14 ′ 3 ″ E 1967 The church was built in 1967 and made a parish church.
Stuttgart-Fasanenhof Kath. St. Ulrichskirche.JPG Ortisei Fasanenhof 48 ° 42 '44 "N, 9 ° 9' 32" E 1966 The church was built from 1963 to 1966 by the architects Brümmendorf, Müller and Reichmann and in 1967 raised to a parish church. The church has glass block walls by the artists Lothar Quinte and Markus Prachensky . The equipment includes an organ from Werkstätte Vleugels, Hardheim, with 21 stops on two manuals and a pedal.
Stuttgart-Birkach Catholic St. Vinzenz-Pallotti-Church.JPG St. Vincenzo Pallotti Birkach 48 ° 43 ′ 38 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 20" E 1966 The church in Birkach was built in 1965/66 and profaned in October 2017. The building was demolished in early 2018. The community belonged to the community of St. Antonius Padua in Hohenheim.
To the good shepherd Stammheim 48 ° 50 ′ 47 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 36" E 1954 The church was built in 1954 by the architect Hänle and made a parish church in 1959.
Stuttgart-Dürrlewang Catholic Church of the Holy Family 1.JPG To the Holy Family Dürrlewang 48 ° 43 ′ 5 "N, 9 ° 6 ′ 46" E 1959 The church was built in 1959 and made a parish church in 1966.
To the Holy Trinity red 48 ° 49 ′ 56 "N, 9 ° 11 ′ 29" E 1954 The church was built in 1954 and made a parish church in 1958.
  Another catholic Church:    
St Maria Himmelfahrt Stuttgart.jpg Saint Mary of the Assumption Feuerbach 48 ° 48 ′ 43 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 2" E 1990-95

Consecration: 1997

neo-baroque building; District seat of the Society of St. Pius X .; Tridentine Mass

Pius Brotherhood, German District

The Catholic Church of St. Maria Himmelfahrt in Stuttgart-Feuerbach, which was built in 1990 and consecrated in 1997, belongs to the German district of the Pius Brotherhood , St. Athanasius Priory . It is sorted at the end of the table above.

Orthodox churches

Illustration church district Location Coordinates Denomination construction time particularities
Ascension of Christ west 48 ° 46 ′ 13 ″ N, 9 ° 9 ′ 2 ″ E orthodox 1947-49 Architect Prof. Lempp
Greek Orthodox Church of Peter and Paul in Feuerbach - panoramio.jpg
Peter and Paul Feuerbach 48 ° 48 '50 "N, 9 ° 7' 53" E orthodox
Romanian-orth.  Church Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen.JPG
Birth of Jesus Christ Zuffenhausen 48 ° 50 ′ 23 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 37" E orthodox The former Johann-Albrecht-Bengel-Haus of the Evangelical Michaelskirchengemeinde Neuwirtshaus in Zuffenhausen was converted into an Orthodox church in 2004. A large tower was added to the outwardly simple church with a small roof turret in which two small bells hang.
Stuttgart - Russian Church 2.JPG
St. Nikolai Stuttgart 48 ° 47 '2 "N, 9 ° 9' 49" E orthodox 1895 The church was built according to plans by the architect Ludwig Eisenlohr .
Holy Prophet Elias Stuttgart 48 ° 48 ′ 40 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 50" E orthodox Russian Orthodox
Serbian Orthodox Church south 48 ° 45 '38 "N, 9 ° 9' 26" E orthodox

New Apostolic Churches

Illustration church district Location Coordinates construction time particularities
New Apostolic Church Bad Cannstatt Dennerstrasse 48 ° 48 '10 "N, 9 ° 13' 54" E
New Apostolic Church Botnang Brahmsweg 48 ° 46 ′ 29 "N, 9 ° 7 ′ 53" E
New Apostolic Church Feuerbach Klagenfurter Strasse 48 ° 48 ′ 30 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 33" E
New Apostolic Church Heslach Böblinger Strasse 48 ° 45 ′ 22 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 28" E
New Apostolic Church Mulhouse Kurlandweg 48 ° 50 ′ 29 "N, 9 ° 13 ′ 44" E
New Apostolic Church Muenster Austraße 48 ° 49 ′ 23 "N, 9 ° 13 ′ 21" E
New Apostolic Church Regret Plover Trail 48 ° 49 ′ 48 ″ N, 9 ° 14 ′ 4 ″ E
New Apostolic Church Neuwirtshaus 48 ° 50 ′ 17 "N, 9 ° 8 ′ 55" E
New Apostolic Church North Eckartshaldenweg 48 ° 47 '50 "N, 9 ° 10' 49" E
New Apostolic Church Obertürkheim Asangstrasse 48 ° 45 ′ 52 "N, 9 ° 16 ′ 17" E
New Apostolic Church east Einkornstrasse 48 ° 47 ′ 1 ″ N, 9 ° 12 ′ 11 ″ E 1937 Built in the classic form of a three-aisled basilica made of exposed brickwork
New Apostolic Church Rohracker Wollerweg 48 ° 45 '28 "N, 9 ° 13' 59" E
New Apostolic Church Sillenbuch Liliencronstrasse 48 ° 44 ′ 29 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 38" E
New Apostolic Church Stammheim Firefly Trail 48 ° 51 '8 "N, 9 ° 9' 9" E
New Apostolic Church Climb 48 ° 48 ′ 46 "N, 9 ° 12 ′ 31" E
New Apostolic Church south Immenhofer Strasse 48 ° 45 ′ 45 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 36" E 1926 For a long time the largest South German New Apostolic Church with 1,500 seats.

The Weigle organ received the State Prize of the German Empire and the State of Württemberg in 1927

New Apostolic Church Untertürkheim Fellbacher Strasse 48 ° 46 ′ 59 "N, 9 ° 15 ′ 21" E 1928 built in the Bauhaus style, damaged in the war.
New Apostolic Church Cheeks Höhbergstrasse 48 ° 46 ′ 6 "N, 9 ° 14 ′ 43" E
New Apostolic Church Weilimdorf Widdumhofstrasse 48 ° 48 ′ 47 "N, 9 ° 6 ′ 35" E
New Apostolic Church west Rosenbergstrasse 48 ° 46 ′ 47 "N, 9 ° 9 ′ 31" E 1904-05
New Apostolic Church Zuffenhausen Hohenloherstrasse 48 ° 49 ′ 45 "N, 9 ° 10 ′ 35" E 1957-58
New Apostolic Church Degerloch Leinfeldener Strasse 1914 Renovation 1995, award "Exemplary Building Stuttgart 1997"
New Apostolic Church Möhringen Udamstrasse 1949/50
New Apostolic Church Plieningen Luzernestrasse 1964
New Apostolic Church Vaihingen Sternecker Strasse 1933

Individual evidence

  1. see at http://www.elk-wue.de ; Search with "Stiftskirche"
  2. Heilandskirche Stuttgart East
  3. Gospel in the East
  4. http://www.sonnenberg-kirche.de/
  5. ^ Paulus community Stuttgart-West
  6. Collegiate Church
  7. our church | Hope Church - UMC Stuttgart. In: emk-hoffnungskirche-stuttgart.de. Retrieved April 5, 2016 .
  8. ^ Mosaic Church Stuttgart
  9. ^ Old Catholic Church in Stuttgart
  10. ^ Anglican Church in Stuttgart
  11. On Saturday and Sunday, May 12th and 13th (2007), the Stuttgart St.-Lideta-le-Mariam (Annunciation) congregation of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church will move into the church with festive services. At the Diocese of Rottenburg-Stuttgart
  12. ↑ Society of St. Peter - Home. Retrieved March 25, 2019 .
  13. St. Barbara Hofen
  14. St. Michael Sillenbuch
  15. Melanie Maier, Chaldeans in Stuttgart. Own church for Christians from Iraq , Stuttgarter Nachrichten online, November 29, 2014
  16. St. Peter in Bad Cannstatt is being torn down and more reports at http://www.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/
  17. profanation of Vincent-Palotti Church in October 2017
  18. ^ Demolition of the Vinzenz Pallotti Church in Stuttgart-Birkach
  19. Parish of the Good Shepherd
  20. ^ Parish of the Holy Family

Web links