Assumption of Mary (Bad Aibling)
The parish church of the Assumption of Mary is a Roman Catholic church in Bad Aibling . It belongs to the parish of the Assumption of Mary Bad Aibling in the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising .
history
The essentially late-Gothic church from around 1431 was renovated in 1663 and extended to the west in 1755/1756 according to plans by Johann Michael Fischer and newly vaulted. After 1756, Abraham Miller was recorded as foreman of this renovation ; it was carried out by master mason Johann Seydl. Restorations were carried out in the years 1970–1972 inside and out in 1992 based on findings from 1756.
Building
The church is a spacious hall building with five axes with a short retracted chancel and a three-sided end. In the north there is a tower with a dome . Several tombstones from the 16th and 17th centuries are placed outside, including one of Wilhelm von Prandt († 1752) and family with a relief of the resurrection.
The interior is closed with a barrel vault with stitch caps, which is arranged over Corinthian pilasters, wall templates and pieces of cornice. There are oratorio balconies in the chancel. The rococo stucco with plant motifs between rocailles and sparse bandwork was installed in the choir in 1756 by Thomas Schwarzenberger from Aibling, the stucco in the nave by the employees of Dominikus Zimmermann , Johann Georg Funck and Johann Martin Pichler. The ceiling paintings were executed by Johann Martin Heigl and are marked with “M. Heigle inv. Et PIXIT A. 1756 ", and make the choir the Virgin Mary as Help of Christians across the continents represents, in the nave, the Assumption of Mary . The setting of the stucco and the space bowl as well as the cartouche pictures were executed by Caspar Weidinger in 1783. The two-story west gallery stands on four pillars. The organ is located on the upper floor.
Facility
The high altar from 1756 was reworked in 1856 and shows a figure of the Enthroned Mother of God from around 1480 and the Holy Spirit in the altar extract . The associated rococo ornaments were added again in 1941. In the choir there is also a crucifixion group with Mary and John above an honorary shrine and a figure of St. John Nepomuk , which was created by Joseph Götsch around 1760 .
In the nave, in front of the triumphal arch, there are two side altars, which were also created by Götsch. The right side altar is marked “1761” and was changed in the extract in 1856. The paintings were created by Heigl and show the handover of the scapulars to St. Simon Stock on the left side altar, and the martyrdom of St. Stephen on the right .
The strongly curved pulpit was also designed by Götsch in 1783. The figures of the four evangelists are missing. A baptismal font made of red marble comes from the late Gothic period. Other furnishings include confessionals and paintings of the Stations of the Cross . In the sign on the south side there is a tombstone of priest Wolfgang Hagedorn († 1503), on the north wall of the nave there is one for Wilhelm Prandt zu Prandthausen († 1572). There, in 1575, epitaphs of the family of the caretaker Hanz Caspar von Pienzenau were set up.
organ
The organ was built in 1982 by the organ building company Münchener Orgelbau. The slider chests -instrument has 36 registers on three manual stations and pedal .
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- Coupling : II / I, III / I, III / II, I / P, II / P, III / P
literature
- Georg Dehio : Handbook of the German art monuments. Bayern IV: Munich and Upper Bavaria. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich, Berlin 2006, ISBN 978-3-422-03115-9 , pp. 79–80.
Web links
Individual evidence
Coordinates: 47 ° 51 ′ 58.3 " N , 12 ° 0 ′ 41.7" E