Ludwig Glöckner

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Ludwig Glöckner (born June 7, 1909 , † 1997 in Berlin ) was a German organ builder in Berlin.

Life

He grew up as the son of a master carpenter in the Sudetenland . From 1926 to 1930 he learned organ building in the Heinrich Schiffner Nachsteiger company. In 1938 Ludwig Glöckner passed the master craftsman examination and then founded a workshop in Kosten . In 1939 he built a two-manual organ in Reichenberg . In 1945 he worked as a voicer for Ladislav Hauser.

After the Germans were expelled from Czechoslovakia , Ludwig Glöckner founded a workshop in the Friedrichshain district of the Soviet sector of Berlin in 1947 . He built a few organs, but his main focus was on rebuilding, repairs and cleaning. In 1977 he passed the workshop on to Axel Stüber. He has been building barrel organs since 1991.

Works (selection)

12 new organs by Ludwig Glöckner are known. Some have been preserved. Instruments that are no longer available are in italics .
New organs

year place building image Manuals register Remarks
1939 Reichenberg , today Liberec Ursuline Church Herz Jesu II / P 14th Eliminated when the church closed in 1950
after 1947 Berlin-Pankow Franciscan Church I. 5
1951 Berlin-Lichterfelde Catholic St. Anne's Church II / P 12 Replaced in 2003
1955-1958 Berlin-Friedrichshain St. Andreas-St. Markus Community Hall, Andreashaus II / P 10 1958 inauguration, received
1966 Friedland , Mecklenburg St. Marien, parish hall I. 3 Transferred to Weitin in 2003, and to the Mecklenburg Organ Museum in Malchow in 2013
1968 Eichhorst , Mecklenburg Protestant church I / p 5 receive
1970 Raden , Mecklenburg Catholic Church of St. Michael I / P 5 receive
1970 Marlow , Mecklenburg Catholic Church I. 4th
1973 Berlin center Philippus-Apostel-Community Hall, Charitestr. 2 I / p 3
1974 Lieske , Lower Lusatia Protestant church I. 5 receive
1974 Stavenhagen , Mecklenburg Catholic Church I / p 3 receive
1975 Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg New Apostolic Church

More work

year place building image Manuals register Remarks
1953 Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg Elias Church , today MACH with a museum II / P 25th Rebuilding and downsizing with reconstruction of the Grüneberg organ from 1910, not playable since around 1990, general overhaul by Markus Voigt in 2012 in the children's museum
1957 King Wusterhausen Kreuzkirche Rearrangement (conversion?)
1959/1960 Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg Gethsemane Church Rescheduling
1965 Berlin Golgotha ​​Church modification
1965 Berlin-Niederschönhausen Friedenskirche Rescheduling
1969 Spremberg , Lower Lusatia Country church Rescheduling
1969/1971 Spremberg Kreuzkirche Rescheduling

literature

  • Uwe Pape , Tomaš Horák, Albrecht Bönisch, Christhard Kirchner: Ludwig Glöckner. In: Uwe Pape, Wolfram Hackel, Christhard Kirchner (Eds.): Lexicon of North German Organ Builders. Volume 4. Berlin, Brandenburg and the surrounding area. Pape Verlag, Berlin 2017, ISBN 978-3-921140-06-2 , p. 175 f.

Individual evidence

  1. Kostel Božského srdce Páně with the history of the church (Czech)
  2. 150 years of the parish of St. Andreas St. Markus Festschrift, pp. 42, 43 (photo), 59 (pdf, there pp. 44f., 61)
  3. Church music of the Evangelical Church Congregation St. Markus, with photo
  4. ^ Organ Mecklenburgisches Orgelmuseum; No reference to a new Glöckner organ to be found in the digital inventory of the organ museum
  5. Organ in Eichhorst Mecklenburg Organ Museum
  6. St. Michael village church in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
  7. ^ Mecklenburgisches Orgelinventar Orgelmuseum Malchow, also listed there by Eichhorst, Raden and Weitin
  8. History and description of the MACHmit organ ! Museum Berlin
  9. Photo gruneberg.pl, with the old Grüneberg disposition
  10. DO it! Museum put the restored organ into operation at Berliner Woche from October 31, 2013
  11. Organ of the Kreuzkirche Organ of the Kreuzkirche Königs Wusterhausen Organ index