St. Emmeram (Englschalking)
St. Emmeram is a Catholic parish church in the Englschalking district of Munich . It was built in 1931 and is dedicated to St. Emmeram von Regensburg , whose festival is celebrated on September 22nd. A mosaic above the side entrance shows “St. Emmeramus ”.
location
The church is located together with the parish and community center as well as the kindergarten on Putziger Strasse in Englschalking, in the immediate vicinity of the primary school.
history
As early as 1904, a church building association was founded in Englschalking to collect funds for the construction of a new Catholic church, as the space in the medieval church of St. Nikolaus was no longer sufficient. In 1930, as part of the incorporation of the community of Daglfing into Munich, the Munich-Englschalking-Denning Curate was founded.
The church was designed and built in 1931 by the Munich architect Franz Lochbrunner. Cardinal Michael Faulhaber consecrated the church in 1932. In 1937 an extension by Eugen Dreisch followed. On July 1, 1941, the curate was elevated to a parish . 1983 to 1984 the interior of the church was renovated. In 2008 the facade was renovated.
organ
The organ was built in 1976 by Hubert Sandtner . She has 25 registers on two manuals and pedal and has slider chests and mechanical play and register contractures . The coupling manual is a specialty .
She has the following disposition :
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- Pair : III / II, II / P, III / P
Bells
The saddle roof tower houses a three-part bronze bell in tone sequence g '- b' - g, of which the small death bell (g ) originates from the construction time of the church.
Parish
In addition to the parish church, the parish of St. Emmeram also includes the branch churches of St. Nikolaus in Englschalking and St. Philipp and Jakob in Daglfing .
From 1930 to 1965 Pastor Friedrich Jacob headed the curate and then the parish. Until December 2013 the pastor was Bernhard Busch. Currently (2019) Peter Duswald is the parish administrator .
swell
- ↑ Stone plaque at the entrance to the church
- ↑ Internet presence of the community
- ^ The Sandtner organ in St. Emmeran , accessed on September 4, 2019.
- ↑ sankt-emmeram.de: Imprint. Retrieved September 1, 2019 .
literature
- Willibald Karl (Ed.): Villages on the brick land . Daglfing-Denning-Englschalking-Johanneskirchen-Zamdorf. Buchendorfer, Munich 2002, ISBN 978-3-934036-90-1 .
Web links
- Website of the municipality of St. Emmeram
- Catholic parish church St. Emmeram on the website of the Association for District Culture in the Munich Northeast eV
Coordinates: 48 ° 9 ′ 16.5 ″ N , 11 ° 38 ′ 31 ″ E