St. Koloman (fishermen's houses)

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St. Koloman with maypole in the center of Fischerhäuser

St. Koloman , the so-called Heidekirche , is the Catholic branch church of the Ismaning district of Fischerhäuser . St. Koloman was built in the neo-Romanesque style. A plaque with the fallen soldiers of the Second World War is attached to the church. The architect of St. Koloman was Friedrich Ferdinand Haindl from Munich .

Founding history

After the Second World War, the local community of Fischerhäuser grew . Around 1950, around 300 residents and landowners lived at the fork in the road to Erding and Freising . When going to church, the Catholic families had to travel about four kilometers to the village church of St. Johann Baptist. Therefore - with the support of the Ismaning clergy - a church building association was founded in 1950 with the aim of building a separate church for the heather residents. The foundation stone was laid in May 1952 and the church was consecrated in September 1952. St. Koloman was elected patron saint of the church .

Architecture and interior design

The church is plastered white except for the completely undivided facade made of gray field stone, in which only the arched portal opens, and is illuminated through colorful arched windows. The single-nave hall has a flat wooden ceiling with a gallery over the entire entrance side.

The church is decorated with Baroque and Gothic works of art from the Ismaning churches that were removed there in the past. A late Gothic St. Koloman, dressed as a pilgrim, a Gothic St. Leonhard from the 14th century and a Baroque St. Nepomuk were set up .

In 2000 a restored wood-carved cross, the mission cross that had been attached to the west side of the tower of the Ismaning Neo-Romanesque church for around 50 years , was erected on the back wall of the choir .

Above the sacristy door there is an image of the Sacred Heart from the late 18th century and in the northwest corner of the church there is a depiction of the baptism of Jesus from the 17th century.

A baroque sculpture of the Virgin Mary with the baby Jesus in front of the door to the sacristy once adorned an apiary in the Erdinger room. A pagan man saw their worth, bought them and left them to the church.

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 15 ′ 8 ″  N , 11 ° 41 ′ 41 ″  E