List of Evangelical Lutheran churches in Hamburg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Regional Evangelical Lutheran churches

The five main churches of Hamburg (highlighted under canon law) and a large number of others belonged to the former Evangelical Lutheran Church in the Hamburg state . The most famous church is the main church of St. Michael , called Michel , with its characteristic tower the symbol of the city. The old main church St. Nikolai has only been a memorial since it was destroyed in World War II . The oldest Lutheran church in the city, the Sinstorfer Church (beginning of the 11th century), belonged to the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hanover until 1977.

Illustration Surname District, district, street
and location
construction time Comments, website
Hamburg-090613-0367-DSC 8464-Michel.jpg Main church
St. Michaelis
Neustadt
English plank

53 ° 32 '54.2 "  N , 9 ° 58' 44.2"  E

1786, destroyed in 1906, reconstruction in 1913, damaged in 1943, restoration by 1955 Called "Michel", it is the most famous church in Hamburg and a landmark of the Hanseatic city. With 2500 seats, the Michel is the largest church in Hamburg and the youngest of Hamburg's five main churches. The church interior has a cross-shaped floor plan with a width of 51 m, a length of 71 m and a height of 27 m. Height of the tower: 132 m . [Homepage]
St. Petri Hamburg stitched 2009 1.jpg Main Church of
St. Petri
Old town
Bergstrasse

53 ° 33 '1.5 "  N , 9 ° 59' 48.3"  E

1st construction: 12th century.
2nd construction: 1842–1849 or 1878 (tower),
damaged in 1941, restoration by 1963
The first church was destroyed to the ground in the Hamburg fire in 1842 . The 132 m high church tower can be climbed over 544 steps up to a height of 123 m. [Homepage]
Hamburg St. Katharinen 01 KMJ.jpg Main Church of
St. Catherine
Old town
Grimm

53 ° 32 '45.4 "  N , 9 ° 59' 39.8"  E

1450 (nave), 1657 (tower), 1950–1957 (reconstruction) After the bombing of July 30, 1943, essentially only the outer walls and the tower shaft remained. The reconstruction took place between 1950 and 1956. In 1957 the destroyed, 116.7 m high tower was restored with a steel structure in the shape of the 17th century. [Homepage]
Hh-st-jacobi.jpg Main church
St. Jacobi
Old town
Jakobikirchhof

53 ° 33 '1.5 "  N , 10 ° 0' 2.4"  E

Construction from 1254,
destroyed in 1944,
reconstruction until 1959
Height of the tower: 125 m . [Homepage]
Hamburg StNikolai neu1.jpg Main Church of
St. Nikolai
Harvestehude
Harvesterhuder Weg

53 ° 34 '52.1 "  N , 9 ° 59" 24.9 "  E

1960-62 With the 3 m high weather vane, the tower reaches a height of 89.4 m . The entire length is about 40.5 m and the width about 35 m. [Homepage]
Advent Church Hamburg-Schnelsen, tower.jpg Advent Church Schnelsen
Kriegerdankweg 7 c

53 ° 37 '53.4 "  N , 9 ° 54' 49.8"  E

1949 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Rahlstedt Alt-Rahlstedter-Kirche 01.jpg Alt-Rahlstedter Church Rahlstedt
Pfarrstrasse

53 ° 35 '48.2 "  N , 10 ° 9' 2.4"  E

before 1248 Church is currently being restored (as of June 2009). [Rahlstedt Citizens' Association] , [Homepage]
Hamburg Bogenstr St-Andreas 01.jpg St. Andrew Harvestehude
Bogenstrasse

53 ° 34 '24 "  N , 9 ° 58' 31.5"  E

1907,
destroyed in 1943,
reconstruction by 1951
Built according to plans by Hugo Groothoff . The reconstruction of the church, which was destroyed in the Second World War, was carried out under R. Vogt and the Hamburg Regional Church Office. Participating artists: K. Weiss (altar and pulpit), F. Fleer (altar crucifixes and candlesticks), U. Querner (baptismal font), D. Kressel (window). The entire length of the church is about 29.5 m and the width about 24.5 m. [1]
St. Anschar (Hamburg-Eppendorf) .jpg St. Anshar Eppendorf
Tarpenbekstrasse 107

53 ° 35 '55.1 "  N , 9 ° 58' 56.2"  E

1889 Architect: J. Faulwasser. Renovated in 1952 and 1969, carried out by Dieter and Gerhard Langmaack . The entire length is about 22.5 m and the width about 15 m. [2]
Ansgar Church (Hamburg-Langenhorn) .jpg Ansgar Church Langenhorn
Langenhorner Chaussee 266

53 ° 39 ′ 8.6 "  N , 10 ° 0 ′ 30.2"  E

1930 Architects: H. Geißler and O. Wilkening. The entire length is about 38 m and the width of the narrow nave is about 12 m, with the attached tower the total width is about 19.5 m. [Homepage]
Ansgarkirche Griegstrasse 2.JPG Ansgar Church Othmarschen
Griegstr. 1a

53 ° 32 '58.6 "  N , 9 ° 54' 29.7"  E

1963-1965 Like the Kreuzkirche in Ottensen, it belongs to the Tabita parish. The maximum diameter of the octagonal central building is about 25 m., From which the tower is about 40 m away. [Homepage]
Apostle Church Eissendorf South 2.jpg Apostle Church Harburg-Eißendorf
Hainholzweg 52

53 ° 27 '4.2 "  N , 9 ° 56' 26.2"  E

1962-1964 The dimensions of the angled structure are about 36 by 25 m. [Homepage]
Hamburg-Eimsbuettel Apostle Church 01.jpg Apostle Church Eimsbüttel
Lappenbergsallee

53 ° 34 ′ 33.3 "  N , 9 ° 56 ′ 42"  E

1893-1894
1977 badly damaged
Built by PG Jürgensen and E. v. Melle. Remodeled after a fire in 1977. The previous spire was not restored, and the roof of the nave was simplified. The entire length is about 35.5 m and the width about 24.5 m. [Homepage]
Hamburg-Barmbek Church of the Resurrection 01.jpg Church of the Resurrection Barmbek-Nord
Tieloh 22

53 ° 35 '30.5 "  N , 10 ° 3' 6.2"  E

1916-1920 Erected by C. Günther. Under monument protection since 2001. The diameter of the central dome is about 21 m and the entire length about 36 m. [Homepage]
Auferst lurup.jpg Church of the Resurrection Lurup
Flurstrasse 1

53 ° 35 '31.6 "  N , 9 ° 52' 13"  E

1954 The nave is about 32 m long and the single tower has a width of about 5.5 by 5.5 m. [Homepage]
Hamburg-Lohbruegge Church of Resurrection 01.jpg Church of the Resurrection Lohbrügge
Kurt-Adams-Platz 9

53 ° 30 ′ 30 "  N , 10 ° 12 ′ 34"  E

1970 The futuristic building has a length of about 31 m and a width of 22 m without the stand-alone tower. [Homepage]
Church of the Resurrection (Hamburg-Marmstorf) .ajb.jpg Church of the Resurrection Marmstorf
Marmstorfer Weg / Elfenwiese

53 ° 26 '21.1 "  N , 9 ° 58' 5.6"  E

1958 The church has a total length of about 30 m and with the attached tower a width of about 24 m. [Homepage]
Church-hamburg-bergstedt2.jpeg Bergstedt Church Bergstedt
Wohldorfer Damm

53 ° 40 '19.9 "  N , 10 ° 7' 34.8"  E

before 1248
1745 (tower)
The tower is 37 m high. The length is about 33 m and the width about 17 m. [Homepage]
Blankenese Church.jpg Blankenese Church Blankenese
Mühlenberger Weg

53 ° 33 '42.4 "  N , 9 ° 48' 46.5"  E

1896 A striking landmark of the district. Also known in Blankenese as the Marktkirche or Marktkirche . [Homepage] , [Homepage]
Bodelschwingh Church (Hamburg-Winterhude) .jpg Bodelschwingh Church Winterhude
Forsmannstrasse 17

53 ° 35 '1.7 "  N , 10 ° 0' 50.4"  E

1962 Architects: Dieter and Gerhard Langmaack , facade: F. Porsche, windows: A. Andersch. [Homepage]
StBonifatius.jpg St. Boniface Barmbek-Nord
Lämmersieth 65

53 ° 35 '17.2 "  N , 10 ° 3' 33.3"  E

1968 Architect: H. Wolfger. [Homepage]
Broder-Hinrick-Church (Hamburg-Langenhorn) .jpg Broder Hinrick Church Langenhorn
Tangstedter Landstrasse 220

53 ° 39 '46.9 "  N , 10 ° 1' 24.6"  E

1954 [Homepage]
Bghn south side.jpg Bugenhagenkirche Bergedorf
Nettelnburger Kirchenweg

53 ° 28 '51.8 "  N , 10 ° 11' 8.6"  E

1958 [Homepage]
Bugenhagenkirche Hamburg-Wilstorf.JPG Bugenhagenkirche Wilstorf
Rönneburger Strasse 48

53 ° 26 '23.4 "  N , 9 ° 59' 43.9"  E

before 1900 The church is an old half-timbered house with a thatched roof . [Homepage]
Cantate Church (Hamburg-Duvenstedt) .jpg Cantate Church Duvenstedt
Duvenstedter Markt 4

53 ° 42 '16.2 "  N , 10 ° 6' 24.3"  E

after 1950 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Ottensen Christian Church 01.jpg Christian Church Ottensen
Klopstockplatz

53 ° 32 '49 "  N , 9 ° 55' 58.2"  E

1735-1738 With an adjacent former church cemetery, including the grave of Klopstock. The total length of the church is about 42 m and the width about 24 m. [Homepage]
Chrkoe south.jpg Christ the King Church Lokstedt
at the Luther beech 36

53 ° 35 '51.1 "  N , 9 ° 57' 38.3"  E

1954-1956 [Homepage]
Bergedorf-West Christopherus-Kirche entrance.jpg Christophorus Church Bergedorf
Friedrich-Frank-Bogen 31

53 ° 29 '23.4 "  N , 10 ° 10' 52.8"  E

1970-1971 The architects were Horst von Bassewitz and CF Fischer. The five bells of the former St. Annen parish hall in Hammerbrook hang in the tower window. [Homepage]
Christophorus Church (Hamburg-Hummelsbüttel) .jpg Christophorus Church Hummelsbüttel
Poppenbüttler Stieg

53 ° 38 '39 "  N , 10 ° 3' 7.4"  E

1952–1953 (ship), 1955 (tower) [Homepage]
Community center grosslohe.jpg Christophorus Community Center Rahlstedt / Großlohe
Großlohering 49

53 ° 36 '9 "  N , 10 ° 10' 51.8"  E

after 1960 [Rahlstedt Citizens' Association]
Christopherushaus schnelsen.jpg Christophorus House Schnelsen
Anna-Susanna-Stieg 10

53 ° 38 ′ 34 "  N , 9 ° 55 ′ 10"  E

1962,
bell tower 1997
[Homepage of the community]
Chrkei tower.jpg Christ Church Eidelstedt-Nord
Halstenbeker Weg 20

53 ° 36 '53.6 "  N , 9 ° 53' 25.3"  E

1959-1962 [Homepage]
Hamburg Christ Church.jpg Christ Church Eimsbüttel Eimsbüttel
At the Christ Church

53 ° 34 '10.8 "  N , 9 ° 57' 42.4"  E

1886,
destroyed in 1944,
reconstruction by 1953
Architect: Johannes Otzen . The church, which was destroyed in WWII, was rebuilt under R. Vogt and the Hamburg Regional Church Office. Participating artists: U. Bläse (altar cross and candlestick), K. Schubert (baptism and pulpit), Th. Ortner (window). [Homepage] , [3]
Chro hochk.jpg Christ Church Othmarschen
Roosens Way 28

53 ° 33 '12.2 "  N , 9 ° 53' 33.4"  E

1899/1900 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Wandsbek Christ Church 01.jpg Christ Church Wandsbek / Wandsbeker Marktplatz
Schloßstraße 78

53 ° 34 '21.6 "  N , 10 ° 4' 16.4"  E

1953–1955 (ship), 1963–1965 (tower) Tower height: 70 m . The structure of the church building has taken over the remains of the previous building from 1900/01, which was destroyed in 1943. [Homepage]
Cornelius Church.jpg Cornelius Church Neugraben-Fischbek
Third Mile 1

53 ° 28 '24.6 "  N , 9 ° 49' 41.9"  E

1964 [Homepage]
Dankeskirche in the Süderstrasse in Hamburg-Hamm-Süd.jpg Thanksgiving Church Hamm
Süderstrasse 321

53 ° 32 '51.1 "  N , 10 ° 3' 19.1"  E

1995 [Homepage]
Church kielkoppelstr.jpg Thanksgiving Church Rahlstedt / Hohenhorst
Kielkoppelstrasse 51

53 ° 35 '21.5 "  N , 10 ° 10' 49.6"  E

1966-69 [Rahlstedt Citizens' Association] , [Homepage]
The Good Shepherd (Hamburg-Jenfeld) .1.ajb.jpg The Good Shepherd Jenfeld
Rodigallee 205

53 ° 34 '16.3 "  N , 10 ° 7' 13"  E

1968-70 Designed by Horst Sandtmann [4]
Oldenfelde db church.jpg Dietrich Bonhoeffer Church Rahlstedt / Oldenfelde
Greifenberger Strasse 56

53 ° 37 '4.6 "  N , 10 ° 8" 30.8 "  E

1966 [Rahlstedt Citizens' Association] , [Homepage]
Three back cemetery.jpg Trinity Church Allermöhe
Allermöher Deich 99

53 ° 28 '56.5 "  N , 10 ° 7' 40.1"  E

15th century (tower), 1614 (ship) The wooden bell tower from the 15th century, which still comes from the previous church, is considered to be the oldest surviving structure in the marshland. [Homepage]
Hamburg.St.Georgskirche.wmt.jpg Trinity Church St. Georg
paddock

53 ° 33 '23.2 "  N , 10 ° 0' 28.3"  E

1747 (originally built), 1957 (new building), 1962 (reconstruction of the tower) The originally Baroque building from 1747 was almost completely destroyed by bombs in July 1943. The current church was rebuilt in 1957. The reconstruction of the tower according to the original plans was completed on January 21, 1962. [Homepage]
Hamburg-Hamm Dreifaltigkeitskirche02.jpg Trinity Church Hamm
Horner Weg 2

53 ° 33 '21.1 "  N , 10 ° 3' 24.2"  E

1693 (originally built), 1956/57 (new building) Replacement for the previous building destroyed in WWII. Behind the church is the Alte Hammer Friedhof u. a. with the mausoleum of Karl and Amalie Sieveking and the grave of Johann Hinrich Wichern . The Catholic Herz-Jesu-Kirche is in the immediate vicinity. [Homepage]
Trinity Church Hamburg-Harburg Tower.jpg Trinity Church Harburg
Neue Strasse 44

53 ° 27 '45.6 "  N , 9 ° 58' 49.6"  E

1650 (originally built), 1962–1966 (new building) Original church building destroyed by bombs in 1944. New building including a fragment of the ruin until 1966 according to ( Friedrich Spengelin ). Part of the St. Trinity Parish Harburg and Hamburg Sound Church. [Homepage]
Eirene bells.jpg Eirene Church Langenhorn
Willersweg 31d

53 ° 38 '53.6 "  N , 10 ° 1' 13"  E

1972 [Homepage]
Church eidelstedt dorf.jpg Elisabeth Church Eidelstedt
Eidelstedter Dorfstrasse 27

53 ° 36 '26.7 "  N , 9 ° 54' 33.9"  E

1906 [Homepage]
Emmaus lurup.jpg Emmaus Church Lurup
Kleiberweg 115

53 ° 36 '7.3 "  N , 9 ° 52' 22.2"  E

1963 [Homepage]
EmmausKircheHinschenfelde.jpg Emmaus Church Tonndorf
district Hinschenfelde
Walddörferstrasse 369

53 ° 35 ′ 22.2 "  N , 10 ° 6 ′ 29"  E

1964/65 [Homepage]
Emmauskirche Front Hamburg Wilhelmsburg.jpg Emmauskirche
(former Reiherstieg Church )
Wilhelmsburg
Rotenhäuser Damm 11

53 ° 30 '51.1 "  N , 9 ° 59" 24.6 "  E

1895–96 (tower), 1953–54 (ship) The foundation stone for the church in the Reiherstiegviertel was laid on June 7, 1895. A neo-Gothic building was erected on the property provided free of charge by the Carl Vering company, construction company, over a period of 16 months under the planning and supervision of the architect Hugo Louis (1861-1935) Church building. The sculptural work inside - altar , pulpit , baptismal font , lectern and crucifix - was carried out by court sculptor Gustav Kuntzsch from Wernigerode / Harz. The inauguration of the Reiherstieg Church took place on October 25, 1896. On Holy Saturday 1945 (March 31st) a British air mine hit the church and the nave was completely destroyed.
In 1953 the nave was rebuilt. The preserved tower is harmoniously connected to a modern nave according to a design by the architects Bernhard Hopp and Rudolf Jäger . On March 28, 1954, the congregation celebrates the dedication of the church. Since then it has been called the Emmaus Church . [Homepage]
Evangelical Lutheran Epiphany Church in Semperstrasse in Hamburg-Winterhude 2.jpg Epiphany Church Winterhude
Großheidestrasse

53 ° 35 '19 "  N , 10 ° 1' 22.2"  E

1961–1962 Architect: Friedrich R. Ostermeyer [5]
Church of the Redeemer in Hamburg-Borgfelde.jpg Church of the Redeemer Borgfelde
Jungestraße 7b

53 ° 33 '18.5 "  N , 10 ° 1' 37.9"  E

1952 The first building was completely destroyed in a bomb attack in July 1943. Reconstruction by Henry Schlote and Friedrich Ostereyer [Homepage]
Erlöserkirche (Hamburg-Farmsen-Berne) .jpg Church of the Redeemer Farmsen-Berne
Bramfelder Weg 25

53 ° 36 ′ 27.8 "  N , 10 ° 6 ′ 42.5"  E

1960 The church is an almost futuristic building. The construction with the staggered tower made of reinforced concrete and the nave made of bowl-shaped arched reinforced concrete with an aluminum outer skin is quite unique in the world. (Statement on the homepage). [Homepage]
Erlk loh south side 1.jpg Church of the Redeemer Lohbrügge
Lohbrügger Kirchstrasse 9

53 ° 29 '52.2 "  N , 10 ° 12' 4.6"  E

1899 Church is currently being restored (as of June 2009). The entire length of the church is about 38 m and the width about 17.5 m. [Homepage]
Flussschifferkirche-neue-Farbe2.jpg River boat church Old town
jetty at the  quay

53 ° 32 '40 "  N , 9 ° 59' 7.2"  E

after 1950 Houseboat. [Homepage]
Fva with water.jpg Francis of Assisi Church Neuallermöhe
Ebner-Eschenbach-Weg 41

53 ° 28 '59 "  N , 10 ° 10' 28.1"  E

1993 [Homepage]
Hh-friedenskirche02.jpg Friedenskirche Eilbek
Papenstrasse 70

53 ° 33 '54.9 "  N , 10 ° 2' 41.4"  E

1885 The total length of the church is about 41 m and the width about 18 m. [Homepage]
Friedenskirche (Hamburg-Farmsen-Berne) .jpg Friedenskirche Farmsen-Berne
Berner Allee 68

53 ° 37 '38.9 "  N , 10 ° 7' 24.1"  E

1939,
1964 (extension + tower)
Tower height: 30.7 m . [Homepage]
Friedenskirche (Hamburg-Jenfeld) .ajb.jpg Friedenskirche Jenfeld
Görlitzer Strasse 12

53 ° 34 '19.2 "  N , 10 ° 8' 17.8"  E

around 1950 [Homepage]
Hamburg-St-Pauli Friedenskirche 01.jpg Friedenskirche St. Pauli
Otzenstrasse 19

53 ° 33 ′ 20 "  N , 9 ° 57 ′ 33.1"  E

1893-94 Architect: Johannes Otzen . Tower height: 78.3 m , of which the cross is 5 m high; Height of the tower clock: 38.4 m ; Roof height of the nave: 25 m . The entire length is about 50 m and the width about 29 m. [Homepage]
Good News Church in Hamburg-Dulsberg (crop) .jpg Good News Church Dulsberg
Straßburger Strasse

53 ° 34 '52.4 "  N , 10 ° 3' 42.6"  E

1935-1936 Architect Friedrich Dyrssen ; [Homepage]
Sankt Gabriel Church on Hartzloh in Hamburg-Barmbek-Nord.jpg St. Gabriel Barmbek-Nord
Hartzlohplatz 17

53 ° 36 '9.6 "  N , 10 ° 2' 43.8"  E

1956 [Homepage]
St. Gabriel (Hamburg-Volksdorf) .jpg St. Gabriel Volksdorf
Sorenremen 16

53 ° 39 '35.9 "  N , 10 ° 10' 7.4"  E

1968 [Homepage]
Mümmel cross.jpg Mümmelmannsberg community center Billstedt / Mümmelmannsberg
Havighorster Redder 50

53 ° 31 ′ 38 "  N , 10 ° 8 ′ 56.5"  E

1975/76 [Homepage]
StGertrud Uhlenhorst Hamburg.jpg St. Gertrude Uhlenhorst
At the St. Gertrudkirche

53 ° 34 '2.5 "  N , 10 ° 1' 40.5"  E

1886 Built by Johannes Otzen . The church took over the Pratrozininum of the former St. Gertrudenkapelle in the old town, which was destroyed in the Hamburg fire . Height of the tower: 93 m , of which the cross is 5 m high. The entire length is about 47 m and the width about 27 m. [Homepage]
Altenwerder St. Gertrud 05.jpg St. Gertrude Altenwerder
Kirchdorfweg

53 ° 30 '22.1 "  N , 9 ° 55' 3.5"  E

1831 nave
1895 tower
The church and the adjoining cemetery are what remained of the former village of Altenwerder. [6]
Gnadenk lohbrügge total 1.jpg Mercy Church Lohbrügge
Schulenburgring 188

53 ° 30 '29.9 "  N , 10 ° 11' 14.3"  E

1967 [Homepage]
Gr flottbeker church.jpg Gross Flottbeker Church Groß Flottbek
At the Flottbeker Church 2

53 ° 33 '56.8 "  N , 9 ° 52' 38.1"  E

1912 [Homepage]
Hh-kircheww.jpg Heilandskirche Uhlenhorst
Winterhuder Weg 132

53 ° 34 '41.8 "  N , 10 ° 1' 1.6"  E

1928 [Homepage]
Immanuel Church in Hamburg-Veddel.jpg Immanuel Church Veddel
Wilhelmsburger Strasse 73

53 ° 31 '31.7 "  N , 10 ° 1' 3.5"  E

1905,
destroyed in 1944,
reconstruction by 1954
Branch church of the main church St. Katharinen, built in 1905 by Hugo Groothoff ; The reconstruction in a different form was carried out by Hermann Schöne . The pulpit comes from Otto Flath . The entire length is about 29 m and the width about 14 m. [Homepage]
Church niendorf nord.jpg Immanuel House, Niendorf-Northwest Niendorf
Quedlinburger Weg 100

53 ° 38 ′ 15.9 "  N , 9 ° 56 ′ 42"  E

after 1950 [Homepage]
Hamburg District Eimsbuettel Jerusalem Church 01.jpg Jerusalem Church Eimsbüttel
Moorkamp

53 ° 34 ′ 9.5 "  N , 9 ° 58 ′ 1"  E

1912,
destroyed in 1943,
reconstruction by 1953
Erected by Johannes Martin Friedrich Grotjan in the Romanesque style. The reconstruction of the destroyed church was carried out by K. Schrieber. The church contains 5 mosaics made by Grotjan himself. The windows are from F. Kreidt. [Homepage]
Johanneskirche in Hamburg Rissen.jpg Johanneskirche Rissen
Rissener Dorfstrasse 2

53 ° 34 '50.4 "  N , 9 ° 45' 42.3"  E

1935 [Homepage]
St. John's Chapel St. John's Chapel Rothenburgsort
Billhorner Mühlenweg 31

53 ° 32 '7.2 "  N , 10 ° 1' 56.5"  E

1959 Architects: B. Hopp and R. Jäger. The altar, candlesticks, baptism and pulpit also come from Hopp. [-]
Hamburg-Altona St-Johannis 01.jpg St. John's Church Altona-Altstadt
At the Johanniskirche

53 ° 33 '35.1 "  N , 9 ° 57' 11.7"  E

1868-1873 It can accommodate up to 600 people. The slim tower reaches a height of 83 m . Architect: Johannes Otzen. The entire length is about 55 m and the width about 28 m. [Homepage]
Hh-curslack-stj2.jpg St. Johannis (Curslack) Curslack
Curslacker Deich / Tönerweg

53 ° 26 '56.2 "  N , 10 ° 13' 40"  E

Oldest parts 1306
nave 1599–1603
tower 1761
transept 1802
[Homepage]
Parish Church-St-Johannis-Eppendorf.jpg St. John's Church Eppendorf
Kellinghusenstrasse

53 ° 35 '32.7 "  N , 9 ° 59' 36.1"  E

1622 (nave), 1751 (tower) The church belongs to one of the oldest parishes in the North Elbe region. It was first mentioned in a document in 1267. [Homepage]
Hamburg - Harburg St-Johannis 01.jpg St. Johannis Harburg
Bremer Strasse

53 ° 27 ′ 28 "  N , 9 ° 58 ′ 52"  E

1953-54 1953–54 based on plans by Karl Trahn instead of the neo-Gothic predecessor building destroyed by bombs in 1944 (built 1892–94, also garrison building). Part of the St. Trinity Parish Harburg [7]
Hamburg-Harvestehude St-Johannis 01.jpg St. Johannis-
Harvestehude
Rotherbaum near
St. Johannis

53 ° 34 '15.1 "  N , 9 ° 59' 36.2"  E

1880-82 Built by W. Hauers in neo-Gothic style. Its architecture and artistic furnishings have largely been preserved (or restored) in their original form. The church is one of the most impressive Hamburg churches and monuments of the late 19th century and is also attracting attention beyond the city. Construction  height of the tower: 73.8 m , in addition there are pommel and cross with 5.7 m (estimated), total height about 79.5 m . The total length is 49.2 m and the width 20.3 m.
After changing the boundaries of the city districts, it is now in Rotherbaum , but still keeps Harvestehude in its name. [Homepage]
Neuengamme St.Johannis.jpg St. Johannis Neuengamme
Feldstegel 18

53 ° 26 '42.3 "  N , 10 ° 13' 18.8"  E

before 1261 [Homepage]
Jubilate south side.jpg Jubilate Church Billstedt
Merkenstrasse

53 ° 32 '21 "  N , 10 ° 7' 39.5"  E

1967 The congregations of Jubilate Church and Kreuzkirche Schiffbek merged. [Homepage]
Jubilate Church (Hamburg-Lemsahl-Mellingstedt) .jpg Jubilate Church Lemsahl-Mellingstedt
Madacker 5

53 ° 41 ′ 16 "  N , 10 ° 6 ′ 23.3"  E

1961 [Homepage]
Youth Church.jpg The youth church Groß Flottbek
At the Flottbeker Mühle 28

53 ° 34 '22.5 "  N , 9 ° 52' 8.6"  E

1964/65 Formerly Bugenhagenkirche, rededicated as a youth church in 2008. [Homepage]
St Juergen Hamburg.jpg St. Jürgen Langenhorn
Eichenkamp 10

53 ° 40 '45.6 "  N , 10 ° 0' 58.8"  E

1938-39 Under monument protection since 2004. The south side of the roof of the nave is covered with solar panels . [Homepage]
Hamburg-Altona Church of Silence 01.jpg Church of Silence
(Christophoruskirche)
Altona-Nord
Helenenstrasse 14

53 ° 33 '30.3 "  N , 9 ° 56' 47.2"  E

around 1910 Formerly the Christophorus Church in Altona, now the meditation church . [Homepage]
Hamburg-Barmbek Kreuzkirche 01.jpg Kreuzkirche Barmbek-Süd
Wohldorfer Strasse 33

53 ° 34 '36.7 "  N , 10 ° 2' 32.5"  E

1962 Architect: H. Biesterfeld. Other artists: K.-J. Luckey (door), J. Weber (altar, cross group, candlestick and baptism), H. Edelmann (window). A previous building that was destroyed in the war was on Marschnerstrasse. This new building was erected on the replacement property provided by the state in Wohldorfer Strasse. One of the first pastors came from the previous church, which belonged to a group of (also personally and financially) autonomous congregations within the Hamburg regional church , which originated in the last third of the 19th century and whose tradition partly continues to this day. [Homepage]
Hamburg-Billstedt-Schiffbek Kreuzkirche 01.jpg Kreuzkirche Billstedt / Schiffbek
Billstedter Hauptstrasse 88

53 ° 32 '15.1 "  N , 10 ° 6' 22.7"  E

1953 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Ottensen Kreuzkirche 01.jpg Kreuzkirche Ottensen
Behringstrasse, Hohenzollernring intersection

53 ° 33 '12 "  N , 9 ° 55' 4.6"  E

1896-1898 Architect: Fernando Lorenzen . The entire length of the church is about 41 m and the width about 27 m. [Homepage]
Kreuzkirche Hamburg Stellingen.jpg Kreuzkirche Stellingen
Wegenkamp 1

53 ° 35 '57.1 "  N , 9 ° 55' 32.9"  E

1966 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Wandsbek Kreuzkirche 01.jpg Kreuzkirche Wandsbek
Kedenburgstrasse 12

53 ° 34 '45.7 "  N , 10 ° 5' 12.3"  E

1908-10 Architect: Fernando Lorenzen ; [Homepage]
198 Kirchdorfer Strasse 168.JPG Kreuzkirche Kirchdorf Wilhelmsburg
Kirchdorfer Strasse 170

53 ° 29 '14.1 "  N , 10 ° 0' 57.5"  E

1614 With adjoining church cemetery. [8th]
Hh-fuhlsbuettel-stlukas.jpg St. Luke Fuhlsbüttel
Hummelsbütteler Kirchenweg 3

53 ° 38 '2.6 "  N , 10 ° 1' 7.6"  E

1893
complete reconstruction in 1937
[Homepage]
Lukaskirche (Hamburg-Sasel) .ajb.jpg Lukas Church Sasel
Auf der Heide 15A

53 ° 38 ′ 41.5 "  N , 10 ° 6 ′ 20.1"  E

1965 [Homepage]
Luther Church Hamburg-Bahrenfeld.JPG Luther Church Bahrenfeld
Lutherhöhe 34

53 ° 34 '16.4 "  N , 9 ° 54' 16.9"  E

around 1910 [Homepage]
Luther Church Eissendorf West.jpg Luther Church Harburg-Eißendorf
church slope 21

53 ° 27 '18.2 "  N , 9 ° 57' 33.4"  E

1906 [9]
Luther Church (Hamburg-Wellingsbüttel) .jpg Luther Church Wellingsbüttel
Up de Worth 25

53 ° 38 '26.9 "  N , 10 ° 4' 29.6"  E

1937 [Homepage]
Maria Magdalenen Church (Hamburg-Ohlsdorf) .jpg Maria Magdalenen Church Klein Borstel
Stübeheide 172

53 ° 38 '1.5 "  N , 10 ° 3' 22.2"  E

1938 Architects: Bernhard Hopp and Rudolf Jäger . The baptism comes from F. Fleer (1965). Wall paintings on the altar: B. Hopp and H. Junker. The pulpit is also from B. Hopp. The entire length is about 31.5 m and the width about 18 m. Homepage
Maria magdalena osdorfer born tower.jpg Maria Magdalenen Church Osdorf
aft Born 127

53 ° 35 ′ 14 "  N , 9 ° 50 ′ 52"  E

1971 Homepage
Church of St. Mary Magdalene 05.jpg St. Mary Magdalene Church Moorburg
Nehusweg

53 ° 29 '19.7 "  N , 9 ° 56'24"  E

1596–97, redesigned 1684–89, 1878–79, and 1906–07 With adjoining church cemetery. [Homepage]
Smo overall.jpg St. Mary Ohlsdorf
Am Hasenberge 44

53 ° 37 '19.7 "  N , 10 ° 1' 36.1"  E

1960 [Homepage]
Hamburg Hoheluft-Ost St-Markus 01.jpg St. Mark Hoheluft-Ost
Heider Strasse 1

53 ° 34 '55.8 "  N , 9 ° 58' 26.1"  E

1899,
destroyed in 1943,
reconstruction by 1949
Built according to plans by Hugo Groothoff . The church, which was destroyed in WWII, was rebuilt under the direction of Gerhard Langmaack according to plans by O. Bartning, including the remains of the old church. Participating artists: W. Tümpel (altar crucifixes and candlesticks), H. Ferber (window). [Homepage]
Mkp front view.jpg Market Church Poppenbüttel Poppenbüttel
Poppenbüttel Market 2a

53 ° 39 '31.4 "  N , 10 ° 5' 10.2"  E

1956 [Homepage]
Martin Luther Church (Hamburg-Alsterdorf) .ajb.jpg Martin Luther Church Alsterdorf
Bebelallee 156

53 ° 36 '33.9 "  N , 10 ° 0' 39.5"  E

1963 Architect: Henry Schlote [Homepage]
Martin Luther Church Hamburg-Iserbrook.jpg Martin Luther Church Iserbrook
Schenefelder Landstrasse

53 ° 34 '38.9 "  N , 9 ° 49' 25.8"  E

1954 [Homepage]
Martin-Luther-King-Church 4 (Hamburg-Steilshoop) .jpg Martin Luther King Church Steilshoop
Gründgensstrasse 28

53 ° 36 '35.9 "  N , 10 ° 3' 33.9"  E

1974 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Horn Martinskirche 01.jpg Martinskirche Horn
at the Martinskirche

53 ° 33 ′ 0 "  N , 10 ° 4 ′ 57.2"  E

1886, tower 1894 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Rahlstedt Martinskirche 01.jpg Martinskirche Rahlstedt
Hohwachter Weg 2

53 ° 36 '23.9 "  N , 10 ° 10' 2.6"  E

1957-61 Architect: Olaf Andreas Gulbransson ; [Rahlstedt Citizens' Association] , [Homepage]
Sankt-Martinus-Kirche in Martinistrasse in Hamburg-Eppendorf.jpg St. Martinus Eppendorf
Martinistraße 33

53 ° 35 '30.3 "  N , 9 ° 58' 59.5"  E

1949 [Homepage]
Hh-Matthaeuskirche1.jpg Matthew Church Winterhude
at the Matthäuskirche 6

53 ° 35 ′ 20 "  N , 10 ° 0 ′ 38"  E

1910-1912 Brick church built in neo-baroque style by the Hamburg builder Julius Faulwasser. [Homepage]
Math-claud-kirch wolliner str.jpg Matthias Claudius Church Rahlstedt / Oldenfelde
Wolliner Strasse 98

53 ° 36 ′ 31.8 "  N , 10 ° 8 ′ 25.5"  E

1964 (parish hall and tower), 1988 (church) [Rahlstedt Citizens' Association] , [Homepage]
Matthias Claudius Church (Hamburg-Wohldorf-Ohlstedt) .jpg Matthias Claudius Church Wohldorf-Ohlstedt
Bredenbekstrasse 59

53 ° 41 '48.4 "  N , 10 ° 7' 46.3"  E

1953-54 [Homepage]
Melanchton flottbek.jpg Melanchthon Groß Flottbek
Ebertallee 30

53 ° 33 '56.3 "  N , 9 ° 53' 17.5"  E

1952 [Homepage]
Michael bergedorf west side 2.jpg St. Michael Bergedorf
Gojenbergsweg 26

53 ° 28 '57.3 "  N , 10 ° 13' 30.6"  E

1954/55 [Homepage]
Michaeliskirche Neugraben.jpg Michaeliskirche Neugraben-Fischbek
Cuxhavener Strasse 321

53 ° 28 '18.1 "  N , 9 ° 51' 20.9"  E

1910-11 [Homepage]
Church of St. Michael in Hamburg-Sülldorf 2009.jpg St. Michael's Church Sülldorf
Sülldorfer Kirchenweg 187

53 ° 34 '45.6 "  N , 9 ° 47' 49.9"  E

1957 [Homepage]
St. Michaelskapelle (Hamburg-Volksdorf) .jpg St. Michael's Chapel Volksdorf
Farmsener Landstrasse 71

53 ° 38 '21.9 "  N , 10 ° 9' 14.4"  E

1958 Belongs to the deaconess mother house Volksdorf. Architects: Dieter and Gerhard Langmaack . The windows are by C. Wallner. [-]
StNicolai Altengamme.jpg St. Nicolai Altengamme
church pegs

53 ° 25 '46.5 "  N , 10 ° 16' 11.9"  E

1747 [Homepage]
St. Nicolaus (Hamburg-Alsterdorf) .jpg St. Nicolaus Alsterdorf
Paul-Stritter-Weg

53 ° 36 '46.8 "  N , 10 ° 1' 18.8"  E

1889 Architect: G. Otte. Renovated in 1938 by B. Hopp. Wall painting on the altar by Friedrich Karl Lensch (1938), the head of the Alsterdorf Institute at the time . The total length of the church is about 31 m and the width about 16.5 m.
Church Niendorf.JPG Church on the market Niendorf
Niendorfer Marktplatz

53 ° 37 ′ 2 "  N , 9 ° 56 ′ 57.6"  E

1769/70 The old Niendorf cemetery is right next to the market church. [Homepage]
Hamburg.Nienstedten.Kirche.wmt.JPG Nienstedten Church Nienstedten
Hasselmannstrasse

53 ° 33 '6.1 "  N , 9 ° 50' 33.8"  E

1751 [Homepage]
Nicodemus Church (Hamburg-Ohlsdorf) .jpg Nicodemus Church Ohlsdorf
Fuhlsbüttler Strasse  658

53 ° 36 '51.7 "  N , 10 ° 2' 10.1"  E

1959 The interior is parabolic . Architect: Henry Schlote. The altar and the baptism are by U. Querner, the windows by C. Wallner. The entire length of the church without the parish hall is about 30.5 m and the width about 13 m. [Homepage]
St. Nikolai Billwerder01.jpg St. Nikolai Billwerder
Billwerder Billdeich 142

53 ° 30 '50 "  N , 10 ° 7' 35.9"  E

1913 Originally built in 1737–39, the tower was added in 1884, but in 1911 this building burned down. It was then rebuilt by Fernando Lorenzen until 1913. [Homepage]
Hamburg-Finkenwerder St-Nikolai 01.jpg St. Nikolai Finkenwerder
Kirchenaußendeichsweg

53 ° 31 '37.8 "  N , 9 ° 51' 57.1"  E

1880-81 Badly damaged by the storm surge in 1962. The total length of the church is about 38 m and the width about 22 m. [Homepage]
Hamburg-Moorfleet St-Nikolai 01.jpg St. Nikolai Moorfleet
Moorfleeter Kirchenweg

53 ° 30 ′ 41.2 "  N , 10 ° 4 ′ 56.6"  E

1680 (ship), 1885 (tower) With adjoining church cemetery; [Homepage]
Bramfeld Easter Church.jpg Easter Church Bramfeld
Bramfelder Chaussee 200

53 ° 36 '34.9 "  N , 10 ° 4' 25.9"  E

1913-14 Tower height: 32 m . [Homepage]
Easter Church (Hamburg-Ottensen) .2.ajb.jpg Easter Church Ottensen
At the Easter church

53 ° 33 '18.3 "  N , 9 ° 55' 56.8"  E

1931 Branch church of the Christian Church in Ottensen. [Homepage]
St Pankratius P7250038.JPG St. Pancras Neuenfelde
Organistenweg 7

53 ° 31 '14.6 "  N , 9 ° 48' 38.8"  E

1682 The interior is one of the most beautiful Hamburg churches with many wall paintings and works of art. The Arp Schnitger organ is particularly worth mentioning . Around the church there is an old, no longer occupied cemetery. [Homepage] , [Arp Schnitger Organ]
Pincerno - Ochsenwerder 1.jpg St. Pancras Ochsenwerder
old church dike 8

53 ° 28 '33.2 "  N , 10 ° 5' 6.3"  E

1673/74 With adjoining village cemetery. [Homepage]
Paul-Gerhardt-Church (Hamburg-Winterhude) .jpg Paul Gerhardt Church Winterhude
Braamkamp 51

53 ° 36 ′ 0.4 "  N , 10 ° 0 ′ 20.2"  E

1962 Architect: Günter Schudnagies; Altar, pulpit, baptism: Ursula Querner; Picture window: Diether Kressel; Organ (1966): Alfred Führer (Wilhelmshaven); Lectern (1980) Fritz Fleer [Homepage]
Hh-bahrenfeld-kirche.jpg Paul Gerhardt Church Bahrenfeld
Paul Gerhardt Church 2

53 ° 33 '42.3 "  N , 9 ° 55' 19.1"  E

1956 [Homepage]
Paul Gerhardt Church Harburg-Wilstorf
Kapellenweg 53

53 ° 26 ′ 46 "  N , 9 ° 59 ′ 14.5"  E

around 1930 [10]
Parish church St. Pauli in Hamburg-Sankt Pauli 3.jpg St. Pauli Altona old town
Pinnasberg 80

53 ° 32 '48.7 "  N , 9 ° 57' 23.4"  E

1st construction from 1682,
destroyed in 1814,
reconstruction until 1820
or 1864 (tower)
Named for the St. Pauli district. After changing the boundaries of the city districts, it is now part of Altona-Altstadt. The first building, a small half-timbered church, was burned down like the whole district in the Napoleonic Wars . The 2nd construction took place under CL Wimmel. Parts of the baptismal font are from 1693 (feet) and 1744 (brass bowl) and still come from the first building, as well as the wooden statue of the Apostle Paul (end of the 17th century). On the east side there are some gravestones and slabs from the 19th century. The entire length of the church is about 32 m and the width about 18 m. [Homepage]
St. Paulus Heimfeld.jpg St. Paul Hamburg-Heimfeld
Alter Postweg

53 ° 27 '56.7 "  N , 9 ° 57' 48.3"  E

1906/07 Built in 1906/07 by the builder August Prien on behalf of the city of Harburg as a neo-Gothic brick church.

[Homepage]

Pauluskirche altona-nord.jpg Pauluskirche Altona-Nord
at the Pauluskirche

53 ° 34 '3.9 "  N , 9 ° 56" 45.9 "  E

around 1930 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Hamm Pauluskirche 01.jpg Pauluskirche Hamm
Quellenweg 10

53 ° 33 '41.1 "  N , 10 ° 3' 35.6"  E

1955 Built by FR Ostermeyer and P. Suhr. Other artists: R. Schreibner (altar and baptism), G. Engst (pulpit), J. Weber (stone reliefs above the entrance, 1960). [Homepage]
St. Peter (Hamburg-Groß Borstel) .jpg St. Peter Groß Borstel
Schrödersweg

53 ° 36 '26.6 "  N , 9 ° 58' 35.3"  E

1959 Architect: O. Andersen ; The altar and baptism are by F. Fleer, the pulpit by O. Andersen and the windows by C. Wallner. The total length of the church without the tower is about 39 m and the width about 27 m. [11]
Hh-bergedorf-kirche3.jpg Church of St. Petri and Pauli Bergedorf
Bergedorfer Schloßstr. 2

53 ° 29 '20.5 "  N , 10 ° 12' 39.9"  E

1502 (nave), extended 1589–1591, 1660–1670 (transept with main entrance) [Homepage]
Hamburg-Altona St-Petri 01.jpg St. Petri Altona old town
Schillerstrasse

53 ° 32 '57.1 "  N , 9 ° 56" 18.2 "  E

1881-83 The only church tower with a double spire in Hamburg. Architect: Johannes Otzen . The entire length is about 40.5 m and the width about 18 m. [Homepage]
Heimfeld, Hamburg, Germany belltower of church st peter.jpg St. Peter Harburg-Heimfeld
Haakestrasse 100c

53 ° 27 '34.1 "  N , 9 ° 57' 17.9"  E

1978 [Homepage]
Petruskirche lokstedt overall.jpg Petruskirche Lokstedt
Winfridweg 22

53 ° 35 '19.7 "  N , 9 ° 57' 10.3"  E

after 1950 [Homepage]
Philemon Church (Hamburg-Hummelsbüttel) .jpg Philemon Church Hummelsbüttel
Poppenbütteler Weg 97

53 ° 39 '4.7 "  N , 10 ° 4' 4.5"  E

after 1950 The youngest of the three churches in Poppenbüttel; [Homepage]
Philippuskirche Horn.jpg Philip Church Horn
Ernst-Scherling-Weg

53 ° 33 '34.1 "  N , 10 ° 6' 14.5"  E

1956 [Homepage]
St. Raphael Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg.JPG St. Raphael Wilhelmsburg
Wehrmannstrasse 7

53 ° 30 ′ 3 "  N , 10 ° 0 ′ 37.7"  E

after 1950 [-]
Pincerno - Volksdorf 4.jpg Church at the Rockenhof Volksdorf
Rockenhof 5

53 ° 39 '2.9 "  N , 10 ° 9' 53.6"  E

1952 [Homepage]
Pincerno Hamburg-Meiendorf 006.jpg Rogate Church Rahlstedt / Meiendorf
Wildschwanbrook 5

53 ° 37 '38 "  N , 10 ° 10' 10.2"  E

1966 [Rahlstedt Citizens' Association] , [Homepage]
Hh-St-Severini.jpg St. Severini Kirchwerder
Kirchenheerweg 6

53 ° 25 '6.9 "  N , 10 ° 11' 54"  E

1791 (current state) With adjoining village cemetery. Parts of the church were built around 1200. [Homepage]
Simeon Church (Hamburg-Bramfeld) .jpg Simeon Church Bramfeld
Am Stühm-Süd 85

53 ° 37 '30.2 "  N , 10 ° 5' 54.4"  E

after 1950 [Homepage]
St simeon osdorf.jpg St. Simeon Osdorf
Dörpfeldstrasse 58

53 ° 34 '14.4 "  N , 9 ° 50' 43.1"  E

1958 Architect: Joachim Matthaei [Homepage]
Simon-Petrus-Kirche (Hamburg-Poppenbüttel) .jpg Simon Petrus Church Poppenbüttel
Harksheider Strasse 156

53 ° 40 '8 "  N , 10 ° 3' 57.7"  E

1964 [Homepage]
South side church to Sinstorf.JPG Sinstorfer Church Sinstorf
Sinstorfer Kirchweg

53 ° 25 ′ 28 "  N , 9 ° 58 ′ 29.1"  E

11th century, around 1400 in today's structure. The Sinstorfer Church is the oldest still standing building in the area of ​​the Hanseatic City of Hamburg. [Homepage]
Hamburg-Kirchsteinbek Steinbeker Church 01.jpg Steinbeker Church Billstedt
district of Kirchsteinbek

53 ° 31 '49.9 "  N , 10 ° 7' 40.2"  E

1883/84 Based on plans by Otto Ritscher. [Homepage]
Stellinger Church.jpg Stellinger Church Stellingen
Molkenbuhrstrasse 6

53 ° 35 '25 "  N , 9 ° 55' 31"  E

1953 Homepage
Wgartenstadt ststephan.jpg St. Stephan Wandsbek / Gartenstadt
Stephanstrasse 117

53 ° 35 '25 "  N , 10 ° 5' 1.9"  E

1956 (ship), 1960 (tower) [Homepage]
Saint Thomas Church in Hamburg-Rothenburgsort.jpg St. Thomas Rothenburgsort
Vierländer Damm 1

53 ° 32 '4.5 "  N , 10 ° 2' 22.9"  E

1885, 1957 (ship) Mostly destroyed by bombing in 1943. In 1957 a new nave was built. [Homepage]
Evangelical Lutheran St. Thomas Church on Haldesdorfer Straße in Hamburg-Bramfeld 2.jpg Thomas Church Bramfeld / Hellbrook
Haldesdorfer Str. 26

53 ° 35 '49.1 "  N , 10 ° 4' 8.3"  E

1965 [Homepage]
Thomaskirche Hausbruch 005.jpg Thomas Church Hausbruch
Lange Striepen 3

53 ° 28 '27.4 "  N , 9 ° 53' 10.4"  E

after 1950 [Homepage]
Thomas Church meiendorf.jpg Thomas Church Rahlstedt / Meiendorf
Meiendorfer Strasse 47

53 ° 37 '9 "  N , 10 ° 9' 30.9"  E

1933, 1958 (extension) [Rahlstedt Citizens' Association] , [Homepage]
Timotheus Church in Hamburg-Horn 2.jpg Timothy Church Horn
Washingtonallee 65

53 ° 32 '56.4 "  N , 10 ° 5' 30.4"  E

1957-61 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Tonndorf Tonndorfer-Kirche 01.jpg Tonndorf Church Tonndorf
Stein-Hardenberg-Strasse 68

53 ° 35 '14.5 "  N , 10 ° 7' 25.6"  E

1953-54 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Altona-Altstadt St. Trinitatis 01.jpg St. Trinity Altona old town
Kirchenstrasse

53 ° 32 '54.4 "  N , 9 ° 57' 1.5"  E

1742–43, 1954–69 (reconstruction) Formerly the main church of Altona. During Operation Gomorrah on 24 July 1943 almost completely destroyed, built from 1954 to 1969 again. The entire length of the church is about 50 m and the width about 33 m. [Homepage]
Halenseering Church.jpg Trinity Church Rahlstedt / Hohenhorst
Halenseering 6

53 ° 35 '14.4 "  N , 10 ° 8' 53.7"  E

after 1950 [Rahlstedt Citizens' Association]
Verheissungskirche.jpg Promise Church Niendorf
Sachsenweg 2

53 ° 38 '7.2 "  N , 9 ° 57" 27.5 "  E

1966 [Homepage]
Hh-eilbek-verskirche.jpg Church of Reconciliation Eilbek
Eilbektal 15

53 ° 34 '21.1 "  N , 10 ° 2' 51.5"  E

1916-20 (ship), 1925 (tower) Architect: Fernando Lorenzen . [Homepage]
Vicelinkirche, Am Markt 8.jpg Vicelin Church Sasel
Saseler Market 8

53 ° 39 '14.1 "  N , 10 ° 6' 46.9"  E

1962 [Homepage]
Hamburg-Hamm Wichernkirche 01.jpg Wichernkirche Hamm
Wichernsweg 16

53 ° 33 '10.7 "  N , 10 ° 3' 49.9"  E

1934 (1st building),
destroyed in 1943,
reconstruction by 1954
Erected according to plans by the architect W. Manshardt. It replaces Klarwein's first Wichernkirche from 1934 , which was destroyed in 1943. The altar, baptism and pulpit also come from Manshardt. The altar mosaic, the altar cross, the altar and baptismal candlesticks are from M. Schegulla. The community rooms are on the ground floor and the basement. The church service room, the sacristy and a group room are on the first floor and two apartments are on the top floor. [Homepage]
Zacchaeus Church (Hamburg-Langenhorn) .jpg Zacchaeus Church Langenhorn
Käkenflur 22b

53 ° 40 ′ 19 "  N , 9 ° 59 ′ 54.2"  E

after 1950 [Homepage]
12ap lurup.jpg To the Twelve Apostles Lurup
Elbgaustraße 140

53 ° 35 '58.7 "  N , 9 ° 53' 12.9"  E

1958 The church has 250 seats, the parish has existed since 1958. Homepage
Zgh westansicht2.jpg To the good shepherd Stellingen / Langenfelde
Försterweg 12

53 ° 34 '47.2 "  N , 9 ° 55' 56.5"  E

1960-1961 [Homepage]

Evangelical Lutheran seaman's churches

The Hamburg seaman's churches emerged as churches of the seaman's mission of the Lutheran churches in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden.

Illustration Surname District, district, street
and location
construction time       Comments, website      
Hh-Swedish-seamans-church.jpg Gustaf Adolfskyrkan
Gustav-Adolf-Kirche
(Swedish seaman's church)
Neustadt
Ditmar-Koel-Strasse 36

53 ° 32 '44.4 "  N , 9 ° 58' 24.1"  E

1907 [12] Homepage
Hh-seamannskirche.jpg Benediktekirken
Benediktekirche
(Danish seaman's church)
Neustadt
Ditmar-Koel-Strasse 2

53 ° 32 '47.9 "  N , 9 ° 58' 39.3"  E

1952 The church was named in 2007 in honor of Benedict of Denmark . [13] Homepage
Hh-norwegian-maritime-church.jpg Norwegian seaman's church Neustadt
Ditmar-Koel-Strasse 4

53 ° 32 '47.5 "  N , 9 ° 58' 37.5"  E

1957 Built by Harald Hille. [14] Homepage
Hh-finnish-seamans-church.jpg Finnish Evangelical Lutheran
Seafarers' Mission
Neustadt
Ditmar-Koel-Strasse 6

53 ° 32 '47.4 "  N , 9 ° 58' 35.7"  E

1966 Homepage

Churches of the Independent Evangelical Lutheran Church

Illustration Surname District, district, street
and location
construction time Comments, website
Independent Evangelical Lutheran Church Hamburg-Hamm 06.jpg Holy Trinity Church Hamm
Burgstrasse 10

53 ° 33 '22.2 "  N , 10 ° 2' 27.1"  E

1958/59 Architect: Gerhard Langmaack , wall painting by Helmuth Uhrig , [Homepage]
Zionskirche (Hamburg-Hohenfelde) .jpg Zion Church Hohenfelde
Wandsbeker Stieg 29b

53 ° 33 '41.6 "  N , 10 ° 1' 44.1"  E

1915,
rebuilt in 1950
Destroyed in 1943
[Homepage]

Former evang.-luth. Churches

Church buildings that no longer exist or only exist in remnants, see also: Churches in Hamburg - Abandoned Churches . The following churches are - provided that membership of the regional church has existed recently - also included in the list of disengaged churches in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany .

Illustration Surname District, district, street
and location
construction time Comments, website
Hamburg StNikolai Panorama.jpg former main church
St. Nikolai
Old town
Willy-Brandt-Strasse

53 ° 32 '51.1 "  N , 9 ° 59' 28"  E

1846–1863 (inauguration) and 1874 (tower) Today a memorial due to the destruction of the nave in the Second World War. The construction of the 147.3 m high tower was not finished until 1874. This made the Nikolaikirche the tallest building in the world until the Rouen Cathedral was completed in 1877. After the television tower, the Nikolaiturm is still the second tallest building in Hamburg, the third tallest church tower in Germany and the fifth tallest in the world . [Homepage]
Bethk südansicht.jpg Bethlehem Church Eimsbüttel
Eppendorfer Weg 131

53 ° 34 '36.8 "  N , 9 ° 57' 46.9"  E

1959 Dedicated in 2005 for financial reasons and closed. The church has served as a daycare center since 2010. [Info]
Bugenhagenkirche Hamburg-Barmbek.jpg Bugenhagenkirche Barmbek
Biedermannplatz

53 ° 34 '53.8 "  N , 10 ° 1' 54.4"  E

1927-29 Tower height: 41 m . 1996–98 restored and rebuilt, closed in 2004. Today it is the Bugenhagen culture stage , or KBB for short . The Catholic Church of St. Sophia is within sight. The Bugenhagenkirche was also used by the Bulgarian Orthodox Church of St. Cyril and St. Methodius in Hamburg. [KBB homepage]
Dulsberg db church.jpg Dietrich Bonhoeffer Church Dulsberg
Dulsberg-Süd 26

53 ° 35 '9.3 "  N , 10 ° 4' 22.6"  E

1969 The church has not been used for Evangelical Lutheran services since 2005.

[Homepage]

Hamburg.Gnadenkirche.wmt.JPG Mercy Church St. Pauli 1906/07 Former evang.-luth. Church, today Orthodox → see under Orthodox Churches / Church of St. John of Kronstadt
Johanneskirche eidelstedt.jpg Johanneskirche Eidelstedt
Dallbregen 3

53 ° 37 '7.3 "  N , 9 ° 53' 51.6"  E

after 1960 [Homepage] The
church was de- dedicated in 2011 in the course of the parish merger in Eidelstedt.
Hamburg-Horn Kapernaumkirche 01.jpg Capernaum Church Horn
Sievekingsallee 191

53 ° 33 '22.9 "  N , 10 ° 4' 52.6"  E

1961 Architect: Otto Kindt In
2004 the Kapernaumkirche was closed, but not yet de-dedicated. [Info] In
2012 the building complex was sold to Al-Nour eV and converted into a mosque. [Info]
Nathanael Church Horn
Bauerbergweg 65

53 ° 32 '47.1 "  N , 10 ° 4' 27.9"  E

1958 1958 Inauguration of the wooden church located in the allotment area with 180 seats. Used by the African Christian community since 2005. Freestanding wooden bell tower (almost 10 m) implemented for St. Bonifatius in Barmbek. [Info]
Easter Church Stellingen / Langenfelde
Brehmweg 50

53 ° 35 '5.2 "  N , 9 ° 56" 31.3 "  E

1961 Dedicated in 2004. Now used by the Hamburg Art Academy. [Info]
Paul-Gerhardt-Church Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg.JPG Paul Gerhardt Church Wilhelmsburg
Georg-Wilhelm-Str. 121

53 ° 30 '15 "  N , 9 ° 59' 28.4"  E

1959-61 Dedicated for demolition on January 20, 2019
Hamburg-Hamm Simeonkirche03.jpg Simeon Church Hamm

53 ° 33 '37.2 "  N , 10 ° 2' 36.5"  E

1965/66 Architect: Friedhelm Grundmann
Former evang.-luth. Church, today Orthodox → see under Orthodox Churches / Church of St. Nicholas
Steph overall.jpg St. Stephen Eimsbüttel
Lutterothstrasse

53 ° 34 '54.7 "  N , 9 ° 56" 37.1 "  E

1912 Closed in 2005 due to financial problems. [Info]
Paul-Gerhardt-Church Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg.JPG Paul Gerhardt Church Wilhelmsburg
Georg-Wilhelm-Str. 121

53 ° 30 '15 "  N , 9 ° 59' 28.4"  E

1959-61 Dedicated for demolition on January 20, 2019
Hh-osterkirche.jpg Easter Church Eilbek
Wandsbeker Chaussee

53 ° 34 '5.1 "  N , 10 ° 3' 11.5"  E

1863-64 Originally built as a cemetery chapel for the now unoccupied cemetery in Jacobipark . Later a branch church of the Friedenskirche Eilbek. Used by the Bulgarian Orthodox Church since the beginning of 2019 .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p B. Rohrbeck, H.-M. Kühn: The churches of the Hamburg State Church , 1970, see under literature
  2. Appointment, in: Wernigerödisches Intellektiven-Blatt of October 17, 1894.
  3. ^ Wilhelm Mannes, From the early days of the Evangelical Lutheran. Church community Wilhelmsburg-Reiherstieg - memories, Verlag AJ Schüthe, Wilhelmsburg 1936, p. 10 ff. (16).
  4. Hildebrand Henatsch, Between Industry and Green Meadows - 100 Years of the Parish in Reiherstieg on the Elbe Island Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg 1896–1996, EB-Verlag Rissen, Hamburg 1996, p. 19 ff.
  5. The dimensions are from a building survey of the church by the architect Deuse, building department (of the ev. Church office) from Jan./Feb. Taken in 1989; the height of the tower is given in numbers, length and width are measured using the tape measure drawn from the drawing.
  6. Church district Alt-Hamburg, Archbishopric Hamburg: Churches in Hamburg - Tourist map , 2nd edition, 2007
  7. Irina Dechow, Gernot Darius: 50 years Christ Church Eidelstedt . Eidelstedt parish, Hamburg 2012, p. 60 .
  8. Hamburger Abendblatt of June 13, 1958 in Hamburger Rundblick: Inauguration by the regional bishop.
  9. Dedication of the Paul-Gerhardt-Kirche , NDR from January 20, 2019, accessed on January 21, 2019
  10. Dedication of the Paul-Gerhardt-Kirche , NDR from January 20, 2019, accessed on January 21, 2019
  11. Representation of the building on the homepage of the Bulgarian Orthodox Community. Retrieved January 29, 2020.

Remarks

  1. ^ Height of St. Nikolai determined by indirect height measurements on August 19, 2009 by J. Möhring.
  2. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Determination of the total length and width via satellite image.
  3. Heights of the Friedenskirche St. Pauli determined by indirect height measurements on July 5, 2009 by J. Möhring.

See also