St. Getreu (Bamberg)
St. Getreu or Latin St. Fides ( Getreu is an ancient name for faith ) is a former Benedictine propstacy in Bamberg , in which and connected new buildings today the mental hospital of the Bamberg Social Foundation , the Klinikum am Michelsberg, is housed.
St. Getreu is located on a hill above Michelsberg Monastery and was inaugurated in 1124 . Today's baroque church was built between 1652 and 1732.
The church has interesting furnishings, ceiling paintings from around 1760, a high altar from 1733 with a late Gothic Virgin from the 15th century.
organ
The organ was built by the organ builder Eusebius Dietmann (Lichtenfels). The instrument has 27 registers on two manuals and a pedal. The playing and stop actions are electric.
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- Coupling: II / I, I / P, II / P; Sub- and super-octave coupling
- Playing aids: two free combinations, free pedal combination, tutti, crescendo roller, single tongue holder
Bells
In the roof skylights hang two bells . They once formed the framework of a coherent three-part bell, the middle bell of which was sold to the neighboring Mühlendorf after secularization in 1806 . The bell was cast in 1733 by the Bamberg bell founder Johann Ignatius Höhn with an excellent artistic design. The three bells are charged musically and in content with the topos of the Trinity : The bells form a triad . In addition to a dedication of all bells to Our Lady, the other patronages are Trinitarian. This veneration of the Holy Trinity finds its artistic basis in the corresponding design of the church. With the sale of the middle bell, this unit was torn apart.
No. |
Name (position) |
Casting year |
Foundry, casting location |
Diameter (mm) |
Mass (kg) |
Percussive ( HT - 1 / 16 ) |
place |
1 | Triune God | 1733 | Johann Ignatius Höhn, Bamberg | 660 | ≈150 | e 2 −4 | Bamberg |
2 | Savior (weather bell) | 551 | ≈90 | g 2 −1 | Mill village | ||
3 | Holy Spirit (measuring bell) | 454 | ≈50 | h 2 −11 | Bamberg |
Individual evidence
- ↑ Information on the organ
- ^ Claus Peter: Bells, bells and tower clocks in Bamberg . Heinrichs-Verlag, Bamberg 2008, pp. 203-206.
Web links
Coordinates: 49 ° 53 ′ 35.3 " N , 10 ° 52 ′ 23.2" E