St. Lukas (Bliesransbach)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Church of St. Lukas in Bliesransbach
View inside the church
View from the chancel to the organ gallery

The Church of St. Lukas is a Catholic parish church in Bliesransbach , a district of the municipality of Kleinblittersdorf , Saarbrücken Regional Association , Saarland . In the list of monuments of the Saarland, the church is a single monument listed.

history

Construction on the church began in 1929. For the construction plans drew architect Peter Marx ( Trier responsible). On 20 March 1932, the church was completed in honor of Our Lady of the Assumption benediziert . The consecration took place on October 16, 1933 by the Trier auxiliary bishop Antonius Mönch . The church was consecrated to the Evangelist Luke .

The church suffered damage during World War II , which was partially repaired and rebuilt in the years after the war until 1950. However, in the 1970s, extensive renovation of the entire building, both inside and out, was required. As part of this renovation, the church received a new roof , a new heating system , an extension of the sacristy and a new altar by 1979 . On December 23, 1979 the church was consecrated anew by Auxiliary Bishop Carl Schmidt .

Furnishing

The artistically valuable furnishings of the church include figures from the 18th century, as well as the altar from 1979 with relics of Pius X. Relics of St. Faustinus and the Holy Trier martyrs are placed in the high altar .

organ

The organ of the church was built in 1953 as Opus 1035 by the Johannes Klais Orgelbau company ( Bonn ) as a two-manual instrument with 20 registers . The cone shop instrument is set up on a gallery . The game and stop action is electro-pneumatic. The disposition is as follows:

I Hauptwerk C – g 3

1. Principal 8th'
2. Lovely covered 8th'
3. Pointed flute 4 ′
4th Chamois fifth 2 23
5. Night horn 2 ′
6th Mixture IV
7th Schalmey 8th'
II upper structure C – g 3
8th. Reed flute 8th'
9. Salicional 8th'
10. Principal 4 ′
11. recorder 4 ′
12. Schwegel 2 ′
13. Sesquialter II
14th Scharff III
Tremulant
Pedal C – f 1
15th Sub bass 16 ′
16. Principal bass 8th'
Covered bass (= No. 8) 8th'
17th Choral bass 4 ′
18th Flat flute 2 ′
Bassoon (ext. No. 7, from c 0 ) 16 ′
  • Pairing :
    • Normal coupling: II / I, I / P, II / P,
    • Sub-octave coupling: II / I
  • Playing aids : 2 free combinations, tutti, crescendo roller, individual tongue storage, Zimbelstern, hand register, trigger

Bells

In 1955, the  Saarlouiser bell foundry in Saarlouis-Fraulautern, which was founded by Karl (III) Otto from the  Otto bell foundry in Bremen-Hemelingen and Alois Riewer from Saarland in 1953, cast four bronze bells with the chimes for St. Lukas: es ′ - f ′ - as ′ - b ′. The bells have the following diameters: 1314 mm, 1170 mm, 984 mm, 877 mm, and weigh: 1450 kg, 1040 kg, 630 kg, 420 kg.

literature

  • Marschall, Kristine: Sacred buildings of classicism and historicism in Saarland . Institute for Regional Studies in Saarland, Saarbrücken 2002, ISBN 978-3-923877-40-9 , p. 666 .

Individual evidence

  1. List of monuments of the Saarland, partial list of monuments Regional Association Saarbrücken (PDF; 10.2 MB), accessed on May 9, 2013
  2. a b c d Parish Church of St. Lukas Bliesransbach ( Memento of the original from January 1, 2016 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. From: www.st-agathalukas.de, accessed on May 9, 2013 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.st-agathalukas.de
  3. Information on the parish church of St. Lukas on: www.kunstlexikonsaar.de. Retrieved May 9, 2013
  4. Opus list as of April 2011  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 141 kB) On: www.klais.de, accessed on May 9, 2013@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.klais.de  
  5. a b c Bliesransbach, St. Lukas On: www.organindex.de, accessed on July 13, 2016
  6. ^ Gerhard Reinhold: Otto bells. Family and company history of the Otto bell foundry dynasty . Self-published, Essen 2019, ISBN 978-3-00-063109-2 , p. 588, in particular pages 87 to 95, 567 .
  7. Gerhard Reinhold: Church bells - Christian world cultural heritage, illustrated using the example of the bell founder Otto, Hemelingen / Bremen . Nijmegen / NL 2019, p. 556, in particular pp. 105 to 112, 518 , urn : nbn: nl: ui: 22-2066 / 204770 (dissertation at Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen).

Web links

Commons : St. Lukas (Bliesransbach)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 49 ° 9 '58.6 "  N , 7 ° 5' 20.4"  E