St. Rupert (Munich)

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St. Rupert
Church portal
organ
Choir organ

St. Rupert is a Catholic parish church in the Schwanthalerhöhe district of Munich . It is the seat of the parish association Munich-Westend.

History and architecture

The neo-Romanesque church was 1901-1903, designed by the Munich architect Gabriel von Seidl built on 23 October 1903 benediziert and 1908 consecrated . It is a central building on the plan of a Greek cross with a lantern-like round crossing tower . All four cross arms close with conches . The particularly elaborately designed north arm with the portal sign is flanked by two low corner towers.

The exterior renovation of the church was completed at the end of 2017; it cost around three million euros. At the end of 2018, the Archbishop's Ordinariate withdrew its approval for the interior renovation, which was estimated at around ten million euros.

Furnishing

Inside, the 19 large leaded glass windows , which were created around 1965 as part of a thorough modernization of the interior by Georg Schönberger , are particularly impressive . The original painting was whitewashed in 1935.

Organs

The organ was built in 1905 by Franz Borgias Maerz as op. 497 with 28 stops on two manuals and a pedal . Large parts presumably come from the Maerz organ op. 206 from 1887 for the concert hall of the Royal Odeon . This had 25 stops on two manuals and was replaced in 1905 by a Walcker organ with IV / 62. The organ in St. Rupert was rebuilt in 1933 by Magnus Schmid and expanded to 37 registers. The cone store instrument today has 38 stops on two manuals and a pedal. The playing and stop actions are pneumatic. A special feature is the Vox humana register in the Schwellwerk , which is in an independent swell box.

I main work C – f 3
1. Principal 16 ′
2. Bourdon 16 ′
3. Principal 8th'
4th Gamba 8th'
5. Tibia 8th'
6th Covered 8th'
7th Salicional 8th'
8th. Octav 4 ′
9. Transverse flute 4 ′
10. Octav 2 ′
11. Cornett III 2 23
12. Mixture IV 2 23
13. Trumpet 8th'
II Swell C – f 3 (f 4 )
14th Cane-covered 16 ′
15th Violin principal 8th'
16. Dolce 8th'
17th Aeoline 8th'
18th Vox coelestis 8th'
19th flute 8th'
20th Lovely covered 8th'
21st Night horn 8th'
22nd Fugara 4 ′
23. Dolcissimo 4 ′
24. Reed flute 4 ′
25th Bach flute 2 ′
26th Sesquialter II 2 23
27. Echomixture III 2 °
28. Trumpet 8th'
29 oboe 8th'
30th Clarinet 8th'
31. Vox humana 8th'
tremolo
Pedals C – d 1
32. Principal.Bass 16 ′
33. Violon 16 ′
34. Sub bass 16 ′
35. Quintbass 10 23
36. Octavbass 8th'
37. cello 8th'
38. trombone 16 ′
  • Coupling: II / I (also as super and sub octave coupling), II / II (sub and super octave coupling), I / P, II / P (also as super octave coupling)
  • Playing aids: Fixed combinations (pp, p, mf, f, tutti); a free combination, register crescendo

There is also a smaller Maerz organ with 6 registers from 1907. It comes from the St. Leonhard Church in Greimharting and was transferred and restored by the Romantic Organ Music Association Munich St. Rupert eV .

Individual evidence

  1. Daniela Borsutzky: St. Rupert: the renovation is now on ice. In: www.hallo-muenchen.de. December 19, 2018, accessed January 22, 2019 .
  2. ^ Homepage of Georg Schönberger
  3. ^ Stefan Hammermayer: Bavarian organ building at the turn of the century. Franz Borgias March (1848-1910) . Wiedemann, Bad Reichenhall 1999, ISBN 3-00-004382-9 .
  4. Homepage of the Munich Romantic Organ Music Association with information on the organs and organ music in St. Rupert

Web links

Commons : St. Rupert  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 48 ° 8 '8.4 "  N , 11 ° 32" 9.2 "  E