St. Petri Church (Kagendorf)

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St. Petri Church in Kagendorf
South side

The Protestant St. Petri Church is a hall church from around 1300 in the Kagendorf district of the Neu Kosenow community . The parish of Ducherow has been part of the Pasewalk provost in the Pomeranian Evangelical Church District of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany since 2012 . Before that she belonged to the Greifswald parish of the Pomeranian Evangelical Church . It is the apostle Peter ordained .

location

Kagendorf is accessed by a street of the same name, which leads west from the federal road 109 to the village green . There the building stands on a surface that is enclosed by a wall made of uncut field stones that are not layered .

history

The core of the sacred building was probably built around 1300. This correlates with the mention of a pastor Albert in 1307. The Stolpe monastery was in possession of the church patronage , which it in 1328 to Duke Barnim III. Lifetime aufließ . After a fire in 1657, the parish rebuilt the building . Here, craftsmen renewed the eastern gable , in which they executed it in half-timbering .

In the years 1750 and 1751 the west tower and the baroque west portal were built. In 1879 and 1880, the upper tower floor and the windows were restored . In 1953 the tower helmet was changed and in 1985 it was covered with copper . The flat-roofed interior was renovated in 1698, painted in 1786, whitened in 1837 and renovated again in 1879. Rectangular fields with ornamental painting have been preserved as remnants of the painting.

Building description

The structure was built primarily from mixed masonry , i.e. H. made of uncut field stones and wall stones , which were combined with one another irregularly and mostly not in layers. The choir is straight and has not moved in. On the east wall is a window with a beveled segmental arch. The gable was built in timber frame ; the compartment also filled with mixed masonry.

The elongated nave is relatively irregularly structured. In the choir is a pressed-segment-arched window, to the left of it a triple stepped, pointed arched portal. Another window and a clogged opening follow to the west, from which only the Fasche can be seen. Below on the left is a segment-arch-shaped, likewise clogged opening with an overlying, rectangular recess. Another window follows to the west. On the north side there are three windows as well as a clogged, segmental arched gate between the middle and the western window. The remains of a buttress (?) Can be seen on the base between the choir and the nave .

The west tower takes up the full width of the nave. It can be entered through a baroque gate; above it is a small window. In the lower tower floor there is a window on the north and south sides. The corners are profiled with hewn cuboids at the height of the window sills. The square and recessed tower tower was also built in half-timbered construction. There are three rectangular, coupled sound arcades on all sides . Above this, the roof tapers into a wooden, transversely rectangular attachment followed by a short pyramid roof , which ends with a tower ball and weather vane .

Furnishing

The furnishings include a baroque altarpiece with Corinthian columns from 1786. The predella depicts the Lord's Supper and the altar panel depicts the crucifixion of Christ . The pillars are decorated with acanthus carvings from 1786. The altar barrier with sawn baluster boards was built in 1668. The pulpit is dated to 1669. It is decorated with cartilage and the donor's coat of arms; the entrance with pictures of the evangelists .

Other church furnishings include patronage stalls with painted coats of arms from the 18th century and a preacher's stalls with bars, also from the 18th century. The bench stalls, painted with tracery shapes, were made in 1879. An epitaph with a painted crucifixion dates from the 17th century .

The organ made by August Holland from Schmiedefeld was inaugurated in 1883 and restored in 1998/1999. The elaborate five-part brochure is in neo-Romanesque form.

The chime consists of a single steel bell .

literature

  • Georg Dehio (edited by Hans-Christian Feldmann et al.): Handbook of German Art Monuments - Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Deutscher Kunstverlag, Berlin / Munich, 2016, ISBN 978-3-422-03128-9 .
  • Landurlaub Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (Ed.): Open Churches II - From Greifswalder Bodden to Peene , Thomas Helms Verlag, Schwerin 2005, ISBN 3-935749-50-3 , p. 60
  • Eckhard Oberdörfer: Ostvorpommern , Edition Temmen, Bremen, 2006, ISBN 3-86108-917-3 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hermann Hoogeweg : The founders and monasteries of the province of Pomerania. Vol. 2. Leon Saunier, Stettin 1925, p. 689.

Web links

Commons : Church in Kagendorf  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 53 ° 47 ′ 45 "  N , 13 ° 44 ′ 4.3"  E