Jump to content

Altenberger Dom: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Recommendations for small changes (to be reverted, if the aren't seen as improvements)
Line 2: Line 2:
[[File:Altenberger Dom Westfassade.jpg|thumb|upright|West facade]]
[[File:Altenberger Dom Westfassade.jpg|thumb|upright|West facade]]


The '''Altenberger Dom''' (or '''Bergischer Dom''') is the former abbey church of [[Altenberg Abbey]] which was built from 1259 in [[Gothic architecture|Gothic style]] by [[Cistercians]]. A listed [[Cultural heritage management|Cultural heritage]], it is located in [[Altenberg (Bergisches Land)|Altenberg]], now part of [[Odenthal]] in the [[Rheinisch-Bergischer Kreis]], [[North Rhine-Westphalia]], Germany. Until 1511, the church was the burial site of counts and dukes of [[Berg (state)|Berg]] and the dukes of [[United Duchies of Jülich-Cleves-Berg#History|Jülich-Berg]].
The '''Altenberger Dom''' (or '''Bergischer Dom''') is the former abbey church of [[Altenberg Abbey]] which was built from 1259 in [[Gothic architecture|Gothic style]] by [[Cistercians]]. Listed as [[Cultural heritage management|cultural heritage]], it is located in [[Altenberg (Bergisches Land)|Altenberg]], now part of [[Odenthal]] in the [[Rheinisch-Bergischer Kreis]], [[North Rhine-Westphalia]], Germany. Until 1511, the church was the burial site of counts and dukes of [[Berg (state)|Berg]] and the dukes of [[United Duchies of Jülich-Cleves-Berg#History|Jülich-Berg]].


Badly damaged after the monastery was dissolved in 1803 due to the [[German mediatisation|secularisation of Germany]], the church was rebuilt with support from [[Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia]], who decreed in 1857 that it to serve as a parish church [[Simultaneum|simultaneously]] by a Catholic and a Protestant parish.
Badly damaged after the monastery was dissolved in 1803 due to the [[German mediatisation|secularisation of Germany]], the church was rebuilt with support from [[Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia]], who decreed in 1857 that it to serve as a parish church [[Simultaneum|simultaneously]] by a Catholic and a Protestant parish.
Line 9: Line 9:
The Counts of Berg settled in the area east of [[Cologne]], along the [[Dhünn|Dhünn river]]. [[Cistercians]] arrived from [[Morimond Abbey|Morimond]] in their land, now [[Bergisches Land]], in 1133. They founded [[Altenburg Abbey]] on the river, with a first church consecrated in 1160.<ref name="Nussbaum" /> The archbishop of Cologne, [[Konrad von Hochstaden]], laid in 1259 the foundation of a larger church "St. Mariä Himmelfahrt" ([[Assumption of Mary]]).<ref name="NRW" /> The [[Choir (architecture)|choir]] of the new church, in [[Gothic architecture|Gothic style]], was consecrated in 1276. The choir's floor plan is similar to that of the [[Cologne Cathedral]], and the choir is similar to the destroyed choir of [[Royaumont Abbey|Royaumont]], probably because the builders of Altenburg were familiar with that site.<ref name="Nussbaum" /> The church was built over 140 years and served as the abbey church for centuries.<ref name="NRW" />
The Counts of Berg settled in the area east of [[Cologne]], along the [[Dhünn|Dhünn river]]. [[Cistercians]] arrived from [[Morimond Abbey|Morimond]] in their land, now [[Bergisches Land]], in 1133. They founded [[Altenburg Abbey]] on the river, with a first church consecrated in 1160.<ref name="Nussbaum" /> The archbishop of Cologne, [[Konrad von Hochstaden]], laid in 1259 the foundation of a larger church "St. Mariä Himmelfahrt" ([[Assumption of Mary]]).<ref name="NRW" /> The [[Choir (architecture)|choir]] of the new church, in [[Gothic architecture|Gothic style]], was consecrated in 1276. The choir's floor plan is similar to that of the [[Cologne Cathedral]], and the choir is similar to the destroyed choir of [[Royaumont Abbey|Royaumont]], probably because the builders of Altenburg were familiar with that site.<ref name="Nussbaum" /> The church was built over 140 years and served as the abbey church for centuries.<ref name="NRW" />


During the [[German mediatisation|secularisation of Germany]], the monastery was dissolved in 1803. The buildings were used for a chemical plant. In 1815, a fire destroyed much of the buildings. Count Fürstenberg von Stammheim bought the ruins in 1833 and turned them over the Prussian king, [[Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia|Friedrich Wilhelm IV]], who was fond of medieval history.<ref name="NRW" />
During the [[German mediatisation|secularisation of Germany]], the monastery was dissolved in 1803. The buildings were used for a chemical plant. In 1815, a fire destroyed much of the buildings. Count Fürstenberg von Stammheim bought the ruins in 1833 and turned them over to the Prussian king, [[Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia|Friedrich Wilhelm IV]], who was fond of medieval history.<ref name="NRW" />


The king supported the rebuilding of the Altenberger Dom, and also the completion of the Cologne Cathedral. He suggested already in the 1830s that the Altenberger Dom should be used by both Catholics and Protestants, and finalized the idea in a royal decree of 1856.<ref name="NRW" />
The king supported the rebuilding of the Altenberger Dom, and also the completion of the Cologne Cathedral. He suggested already in the 1830s that the Altenberger Dom should be used by both Catholics and Protestants as a [[simultaneum]], and finalized the idea in a royal decree of 1856.<ref name="NRW" />


== Windows ==
== Windows ==
The windows are predominantly in shades of grey ([[Grisaille]]), with some coloured windows, especially the large window in the west facade.<ref name="Nussbaum" />
The windows are predominantly in shades of grey ([[Grisaille]]), with some coloured windows, especially the large window in the west [[facade|façade]].<ref name="Nussbaum" />
<gallery>
<gallery>
Altenberg Fenster Chorscheitel.JPG|c. 1270: Grisaille, choir
Altenberg Fenster Chorscheitel.JPG|Approx. 1270: Grisaille, choir
Altenberg Fenster ChorscheitelM.JPG|Detail
Altenberg Fenster ChorscheitelM.JPG|Detail
Altenberg Fenster Nord.JPG|before 1300: Grisaille, north [[transept]]
Altenberg Fenster Nord.JPG|Before 1300: Grisaille, north [[transept]]
Altenberg Grisaille Nord.JPG|Detail
Altenberg Grisaille Nord.JPG|Detail
Altenberg Fenster West3.JPG|c. 1400: Coloured, west facade
Altenberg Fenster West3.JPG|Approx. 1400: Coloured, west facade
Altenberger Dom47 Detail.jpg|Detail
Altenberger Dom47 Detail.jpg|Detail
Altenberg FensterLH6.JPG|19. century: nave
Altenberg FensterLH6.JPG|19. century: nave
Line 29: Line 29:


[[File:Altenberg-wiki.jpg|thumb|upright|The Klais organ]]
[[File:Altenberg-wiki.jpg|thumb|upright|The Klais organ]]
The church has served also as a concert venue. From May to October, sacred music and vespers take place regularly at 11:45am.<ref name="Concerts" />
The church serves also as a concert venue. From May to October, sacred music and vespers take place regularly at 11:45am.<ref name="Concerts" />


The organ was built in 1980 by [[Klais Orgelbau]], [[Bonn]], an instrument of 6300 pipes, 88 stops, four manuals and pedal, with the last pedal stops added from 2007.<ref name="Organ" /><ref name="Klais" /> The organ has been used for concerts and recordings.<ref name="Concerts" />
The organ was built in 1980 by [[Klais Orgelbau]], [[Bonn]], an instrument of 6300 pipes, 88 stops, four manuals and pedal, with the last pedal stops added from 2007.<ref name="Organ" /><ref name="Klais" /> The organ has been used for concerts and recordings.<ref name="Concerts" />

Revision as of 17:45, 13 April 2017

Altenberger Dom
West facade

The Altenberger Dom (or Bergischer Dom) is the former abbey church of Altenberg Abbey which was built from 1259 in Gothic style by Cistercians. Listed as cultural heritage, it is located in Altenberg, now part of Odenthal in the Rheinisch-Bergischer Kreis, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. Until 1511, the church was the burial site of counts and dukes of Berg and the dukes of Jülich-Berg.

Badly damaged after the monastery was dissolved in 1803 due to the secularisation of Germany, the church was rebuilt with support from Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia, who decreed in 1857 that it to serve as a parish church simultaneously by a Catholic and a Protestant parish.

History

The Counts of Berg settled in the area east of Cologne, along the Dhünn river. Cistercians arrived from Morimond in their land, now Bergisches Land, in 1133. They founded Altenburg Abbey on the river, with a first church consecrated in 1160.[1] The archbishop of Cologne, Konrad von Hochstaden, laid in 1259 the foundation of a larger church "St. Mariä Himmelfahrt" (Assumption of Mary).[2] The choir of the new church, in Gothic style, was consecrated in 1276. The choir's floor plan is similar to that of the Cologne Cathedral, and the choir is similar to the destroyed choir of Royaumont, probably because the builders of Altenburg were familiar with that site.[1] The church was built over 140 years and served as the abbey church for centuries.[2]

During the secularisation of Germany, the monastery was dissolved in 1803. The buildings were used for a chemical plant. In 1815, a fire destroyed much of the buildings. Count Fürstenberg von Stammheim bought the ruins in 1833 and turned them over to the Prussian king, Friedrich Wilhelm IV, who was fond of medieval history.[2]

The king supported the rebuilding of the Altenberger Dom, and also the completion of the Cologne Cathedral. He suggested already in the 1830s that the Altenberger Dom should be used by both Catholics and Protestants as a simultaneum, and finalized the idea in a royal decree of 1856.[2]

Windows

The windows are predominantly in shades of grey (Grisaille), with some coloured windows, especially the large window in the west façade.[1]

Church music

The Klais organ

The church serves also as a concert venue. From May to October, sacred music and vespers take place regularly at 11:45am.[3]

The organ was built in 1980 by Klais Orgelbau, Bonn, an instrument of 6300 pipes, 88 stops, four manuals and pedal, with the last pedal stops added from 2007.[4][5] The organ has been used for concerts and recordings.[3]

Graves of nobility

According to a Benedictine tradition, members of the noble family owning the abbey were buried in the church.[1]

Graves of abbots

  • Melchior Mondorf, abbot 1627–1643
  • Johannes Blankenberg, 1643–1662
  • Gottfried Gummersbach, 1662–1679
  • Aegidius Siepen, 1679–1686
  • Johann Jakob Lohe, 1686–1707
  • Johann Henning, 1707–1720
  • Paul Euskirchen, 1720–1723
  • Gottfried Engels, 1723–1739
  • Johannes Hördt, 1739–1779

Literature

  • Martin Banniza: Geschichte und Architektur – Der Altenberger Dom. In: Bergische Blätter. 21, 1998, 3
  • David Bosbach: Altenberg. Der Dom und das Tal der Dhünn. Gaasterland-Verlag, Düsseldorf 2005, ISBN 3-935873-04-2.
  • Nicolaus J. Breidenbach: Die Güter und Beziehungen der Abtei Altenberg zu Wermelskirchen. In: Altenberger Hefte. Nr. 35, Odenthal 2006.
  • Karl Eckert: 700 Jahre Altenberg im künstlerischen Bildwerk vom 13. bis zum 20. Jahrhundert. Beiträge zu Bau- und Kunstdenkmälern im Rheinland 4. Johann Heider, Bergisch Gladbach 1956.
  • Festschrift 75 Jahre Altenberger Dom-Verein 1894–1969. Bergisch Gladbach 1969.
  • Ursula Francke: Archäologische Untersuchungen im Altenberger Dom. In: Ökumenerat der evangelischen und katholischen Kirchengemeinden Altenberg (ed.): Altenberg 1847 . 1857 . 1997. Festschrift 150 Jahre Wiederherstellung, 140 Jahre Simultangebrach des Altenberger Domes. Odenthal 1997.
  • Uwe Gast, Daniel Parello, Hartmut Scholz: Der Altenberger Dom. (= Monumente der Glasmalerei 2). Schnell & Steiner, Regensburg 2008, ISBN 978-3-7954-1960-8.
  • Susanne Heydasch-Lehmann, Andreas Stürmer, Klaus Faika: Altenberg. Der Bergische Dom. Kunstverlag Josef Fink, Lindenberg i. Allgäu 2008, ISBN 978-3-89870-297-3.
  • Hansjörg Laute: Die Herren von Berg – Auf den Spuren der Geschichte des Bergischen Landes (1101–1806). Boll, Solingen 1988, ISBN 3-9801918-0-X (Quelle für die im Dom begrabenen Grafen und Herzöge).
  • Sabine Lepsky, Norbert Nußbaum: Die Westfassade der Zisterzienserkirche Altenberg. Beobachtungen zur gotischen Bautechnik. (= Veröffentlichungen des Altenberger Dom-Vereins 5). Altenberger Dom-Verein e.V., Bergisch Gladbach 1999.
  • Sabine Lepsky, Norbert Nußbaum: Gotische Konstruktion und Baupraxis an der Zisterzienserkirche Altenberg 1: Die Choranlage. (= Veröffentlichungen des Altenberger Dom-Vereins 9). Altenberger Dom-Verein e.V., Bergisch Gladbach 2005, ISBN 978-3-935921-04-6.
  • Sabine Lepsky, Norbert Nußbaum: Gotische Konstruktion und Bautechnik an der Zisterzienserkirche Altenberg 2: Quer- und Langhaus. (Veröffentlichungen des Altenberger Dom-Vereins 11). Heider-Verlag, Bergisch Gladbach 2012, ISBN 978-3-87314-475-0.
  • Brigitte Lymant: Die mittelalterlichen Glasmalereien der ehemaligen Zisterzienserkirche Altenberg. Herausgeber: Altenberger Dom-Verein, Bergisch Gladbach 1979.
  • Heike Ritter-Eden: Der Altenberger Dom zwischen romantischer Bewegung und moderner Denkmalpflege. Die Restaurierung von 1815 bis 1915 (= Veröffentlichungen des Altenberger Dom-Vereins 7). Altenberger Dom-Verein, Bergisch Gladbach 2002, ISBN 3-935921-01-2 (Dissertation Universität Köln 2001, 282 p).
  • Ulrike Wirtler: Das ehemalige romanische Zisterzienserkloster Altenberg. (= Rheinische Ausgrabungen 75). Rheinisches Landesmuseum Köln 1976, pp 84–86.
  • Vincenz von Zuccalmaglio: Altenberg im Dhünthale und der Bergische Dom: mit Ansicht, Grundriß und Beschreibung und einer Orientierungskarte für Touristen. Düsseldorf 1884 (ub.uni-duesseldorf.de).

References

  1. ^ a b c d Nussbaum, Norbert (2000). German Gothic Church Architecture. Yale University Press. pp. 61–62. ISBN 9780300083217. Retrieved 13 April 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d "Mehr als 750 Jahre Altenberger Dom / Die bergische Simultankirche" (in German). NRW Stiftung. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  3. ^ a b "Konzerte und Termine" (in German). altenberger-dommusik.de. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Die Orgel" (in German). altenberger-dommusik.de. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  5. ^ "Altenberg, Dom" (in German). Orgelbau Klais. Retrieved 12 April 2017.