St. Johann (Erding)

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Tower of the parish church of St. Johann

The parish church of St. Johann (also St. Johannes ) is the largest church in the large district town of Erding in Bavaria in Germany .

The church is a late Gothic , three-aisled brick building by the Landshut Building School with a bell tower set off about five meters to the east (see web link).

history

Construction began, instead of an old baptistery, probably at the end of the 14th century . The choir was completed between 1410 and 1420. After the nave was completed, the church was consecrated in 1464. Choir arch crucifix by Hans Leinberger around 1525.

After damage in the Thirty Years' War and the fire of 1648, the church was rebuilt in the Baroque style from 1668 to 1689 . The Gothic vault ribs were replaced by stucco ornaments. The Gothic altars were lost except for a few sculptures.

Another renovation, this time in the neo-Gothic style , took place from 1880 to 1882, in the age of historicism . The baroque stucco was removed and the vault was provided with Gothic cross ribs . The altars were also redesigned, using some of the valuable sculptures. A picture of the baroque interior and the high altar can be seen in the Erdinger Heimatmuseum. In 1891 St. John's Church became the city parish; until then Erding belonged to the parish Altenerding. In 1898 the renovation was completed with the restoration of the outer walls and the church windows.

After the damage caused by the Second World War had been repaired in 1948, the interior of the church was partially restored between 1952 and 1957. From 1976 onwards, necessary repairs to the exterior masonry and the church interior were carried out.

organ

organ

The organ of the parish church was built in 1991 by the Rieger Orgelbau company under the direction of Christoph Glatter-Götz. The instrument has 50 stops on three manuals and a pedal . The slider chest instrument has mechanical play and electrical stop actions . The sounds of the organ can be heard in the feature film Schlafes Bruder as the village organ in Eschberg. The disposition is as follows:

I Hauptwerk C – g 3
1. Bourdon 16 ′
2. Principal 8th'
3. Pointed flute 8th'
4th Flûte harm. 8th'
5. Octav 4 ′
6th Forest flute 4 ′
7th Fifth 2 23
8th. Super octave 2 ′
9. Mixture IV 1 13
10. Zimbel III 12
11. Cornet V 8th'
12. Trumpet 16 ′
13. Trumpet 8th'
14th Clairon 4 ′
II Rückpositiv C – g 3
15th Prestant 8th'
16. Bourdon 8th'
17th Principal 4 ′
18th Reed flute 4 ′
19th Sesquialtera II 2 23
20th Duplicate 2 ′
21st Larigot 1 13
22nd Scharff III 1'
23. Cromorne 8th'
Tremulant
III Swell C – g 3
24. double bass 16 ′
25th Violin principal 8th'
26th Wooden flute 8th'
27. Gamba 8th'
28. Voix céleste 8th'
29 Prestant 4 ′
30th Salicet 4 ′
31. Nasard 2 23
32. Octavine 2 ′
33. Tierce 1 35
34. Sifflet 1'
35. Plein Jeu VI 2 23
36. Basson 16 ′
37. Trumpet harm. 8th'
38. oboe 8th'
39. Clairon harm. 4 ′
40. Voix humaine 8th'
Tremulant
Pedal C – f 1
41. Pedestal 32 ′
42. Principal 16 ′
43. Sub bass 16 ′
44. Principal 8th'
45. flute 8th'
46. Choral bass 4 ′
47. Rauschpfeife 2 23
48. Bombard 16 ′
49. Trumpet 8th'
50. Clairon 4 ′

There is also a choir organ with five registers , which was built in 1989 by the Rieger company. This has the following disposition:

Manual C – f 2
1. Wooden dacked 8th'
2. Principal 4 ′
3. Smalled up 4 ′
4th Schwiegel 2 ′
5. Mixture III 4 ′

Bell tower

The bell tower, separated from the church, dates from the end of the 14th century. This was probably the case from the beginning, as the legend of the “Erdinger tower slide” indicates. The baroque domed roof on the 46 m high, eight-story tower was built by Paul Gunetzrainer in 1651. The church tower was also the city tower, from which a tower guard warned the population of fire and other dangers. The guard had his official apartment on the top floor, which was still inhabited until 1945. As part of guided tours, the tower can be climbed up to this 35 m high tower room as a lookout tower . From here there is a good view over Erding and the surrounding area to Munich , and in foehn weather even as far as the Alps .

In addition, the tower houses a six-part bronze bell in minor - major (a 0 –c 1 –d 1 –e 1 –g 1 –a 1 ), which is suspended in a steel bell cage. The five large bells come from the Erdinger bell foundry (Czudnochowsky). Every Saturday at 3 p.m. the four-part major motif c 1 –d 1 –e 1 –g 1 heralds in the Sunday for five minutes. Before solemnities the deep is a 0 - Bell added taken.

literature

  • City of Erding , published by the Organizing Committee 750 Years City of Erding, 1980

Individual evidence

  1. st-johann-erding.de: Parish Association Erding-Freising
  2. a b Rieger organ . Online at www.pfarrcaecilienverein.de; accessed on January 30, 2017.
  3. Erding, Germany (Bavaria) - Catholic parish church Sankt Johann . Online at orgbase.nl; accessed on January 30, 2017.
  4. Erding, St. Johann ( Memento of the original dated February 2, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . Online at organindex.de; accessed on January 30, 2017. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / organindex.de
  5. ^ Karl-Heinz Göttert, Eckhard Isenberg: Organs! Organs !: Concepts, curiosities, continents. Bärenreiter 2002 ISBN 978-3-7618-1566-3 , p. 140
  6. Erding, St. Johann (choir organ) . Online at organindex.de; accessed on January 30, 2017.
  7. sueddeutsche.de: Legends and Myths
  8. Stadtturm on the Erding Tower Tours website

Web links

Commons : St. Johann  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 48 ° 18 ′ 23.3 "  N , 11 ° 54 ′ 23.3"  E