Parish church Deinzendorf

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Catholic parish church of St. Trinity in Deinzendorf

The Roman Catholic parish church of Deinzendorf is on the eastern edge of Deinzendorf in the market town of Zellerndorf in the Hollabrunn district in Lower Austria . The church consecrated to the Holy Trinity belongs to the deanery Retz-Pulkautal in the vicariate Unter dem Manhartsberg of the Archdiocese of Vienna . Until September 1, 2016, she was part of the Retz dean's office . The church building is a listed building .

history

The parish was founded in 1784. The Josephine Hall Church was built between 1786 and 1788.

Church building

Church exterior

The classicist building has a slightly drawn-in rectangular choir and a protruding west tower with clock gables and a pyramid helmet. The facade shows segmented arched windows and ends at the top with a surrounding eaves cornice. The west facade is simple and has curved gables.

Church interior

The hall space under a flat ceiling is structured with pilaster strips. The arched west gallery on a segment arch swings forward in the middle and carries an organ. The semicircular triumphal arch is slightly drawn in. The rectangular choir has beveled corners. The neo-Gothic stained glass windows from 1896/1897 show the Coronation, Assumption, Pentecost, Ascension and Resurrection.

Furnishing

The high altar as a classical column retable is from the end of the 18th century. The altarpiece of the Holy Trinity was made around 1900. The figures of Joachim and Anna on the side are from the 18th century. The side altar from the late 18th century shows an altarpiece Anna and Maria by Martin Johann Schmidt (around 1780) which was transferred here from the Franciscan Church in Langenlois. The pulpit from the late 18th century shows the handing over of the keys to Peter, the denial of Christ and the walk to Emmaus with reliefs on the pulpit. The holy water font from the late 18th century has a neo-Gothic lid from 1900.

The organ was built by Johann M. Kauffmann (1905) in a classicist case from the late 19th century.

literature

Coordinates: 48 ° 41 ′ 41.3 "  N , 15 ° 55 ′ 28.3"  E