Church of the Redeemer, Bad Homburg

Coordinates: 50°13′35″N 8°36′42″E / 50.22639°N 8.61167°E / 50.22639; 8.61167
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Church of the Redeemer, Bad Homburg
Erlöserkirche, Bad Homburg
Neo-Romanesque
Completed1908
Center aisle of the church, view from the altar

The Church of the Redeemer (German: Erlöserkirche) of

Byzantine style, with rich marble wall decorations and gold mosaics covering the domed ceiling, leading to the church sometimes being called 'Bad Homburg's Hagia Sophia'.[1]

History

The church was built to serve

In 1901, the Berlin architect Max Spitta was entrusted with the construction plans for the church. However, as Spitta died in December 1902, architect Franz Schwechten finished the design in late Romanesque style. The foundation was laid in 1903 and the new church was inaugurated in the presence of the imperial couple on 17 May 1908. The building was primarily constructed by the Philipp Holzmann Company from Frankfurt. The numerous artisan works inside the building were the work of local craft shops.

Architecture

View from Bad Homburg castle
Pantocrator
in the apse vault
Gold mosaics covering the domed ceiling

The church is a cross-shaped structure basilica with four towers, with blind arcades and a high two-door portal arch for the tympanum. The towers on the altar side are larger and higher than those on the entrance side, which gives the building a noticeable shift in perspective, especially from afar.

The exterior façade was designed by Professor Gotthold Riegelmann and is reminiscent of Rhenish

Imperial cathedrals. The interior design and decoration however are reminiscent of the Hagia Sophia. The interior consists of a mixture of Byzantine and Art Nouveau. The theme of Christ the Redeemer is ubiquitous throughout the church, and culminates in the Christ Pantocrator mosaic of the apse vault.[3]

Organs

The organ

Two large church organs are installed in the Erlöserkirche. A turn-of-the-20th-century Sauer organ and a new Bach organ based on a 1742 Thuringian model.[4]

Sauer-Organ (1908)

The Sauer organ whose sound outlet is located above the altar was built in 1908 by Wilhelm Sauer (Frankfurt / Oder).

Woehl-Organ (1990)

Gerald Woehl created the Bach organ in 1990, implementing a design of Johann Sebastian Bach. The organ is located on the gallery balustrade and forms a compositional unit with the Sauer organ.

Church Bells

The church bells consist of five different bells. The largest weighs approximately 6,400 kg. The first four bells were cast in 1905 by the Andreas Hamm bell foundry in Frankenthal. In the 1920s, the Zwingli bell ('Zwingliglocke') was transferred from the neighboring village, Kirdorf, to serve as hour bell. Bells 1, 3 and 4 survived the First and Second World War. Although the second bell, the Landgraf bell ('Landgrafenglocke'), survived the First World War, it was damaged during the Second World War.[5] From the shards of the second bell a new bell was cast by the Schilling bell foundry.

Nr.
 
Name
 
Casting year
 
Bell foundry, city
 
Weight
(in kg)
Nominal
(16tel)[6]
1 Kaiserglocke 1905 Hamm, Frankenthal 6400 g0 +4
2 Landgrafenglocke 1948 Schilling, Apolda 2958 h0 +1
3 Elisabethenglocke 1905 Hamm, Frankenthal 1900 d1 −4
4 Mariannenglocke 1905 Hamm, Frankenthal 1500 e1 −3
5 Auferstehungsglocke 1932 Rincker, Sinn 800 g1 +5
Zwingliglocke 1912 Schilling, Apolda ? es2

Notes and references

  1. ^ Churches - Erlöserkirche[permanent dead link] (from the official Bad Homburg website. Accessed 2008-02-23.)
  2. ^ Bad Homburg tourism website, English version
  3. ^ Kirchenfuehrer - Kirchen im Hochtaunuskreis. Hochtaunuskreis 2006, page 4.
  4. ^ Organs of Bad Homburg (from the Ars Musici Compact Disks catalogue. Accessed 2008-02-23.)
  5. ^ Jürgen Krüger: Die Erlöserkirche in Bad Homburg v. d. H. – Schlüssel zum Kirchbauprogramm Kaiser Wilhelms II. Langewiesche „Die Blauen Bücher“, Königstein 2008, pages 72–73.
  6. ^ Hubert Foersch: Limburger Glockenbuch. Limburg 1996, page 43.

External links