Notre-Dame de Guebwiller

Coordinates: 47°54′21″N 7°12′53″E / 47.90583°N 7.21472°E / 47.90583; 7.21472
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Église Notre-Dame de Guebwiller
Style
Neoclassical
Groundbreaking1762
Completed1785
Specifications
Length71 metres (233 ft)
Width41 metres (135 ft)
Nave width24 metres (79 ft)
Materialssandstone
Administration
ArchdioceseArchdiocese of Strasbourg
ParishCommunauté de Paroisses St-André Bauer

Notre-Dame (Church of Our Lady) is a Neoclassical Catholic parish church in the town of Guebwiller, in the Haut-Rhin department of France. The church is classified as a monument historique by the French Ministry of Culture since 1841.[1] The building is remarkable for its size and for the quality of its decoration; it is considered as the most important Neoclassical church in Alsace,[2] and as an outstanding and most sumptuous example of early Neoclassical architecture.[3]

History

The Benedictines of the ancient and powerful but remote Murbach Abbey in a valley nearby had asked for papal permission to relocate in the town of Guebwiller since 1725, but that permission was only granted by Pope Clement XIII in 1759. They settled near the residence of the bishop, a Baroque palace built by Peter Thumb in 1715, and proceeded to erect a number of stately buildings on an area of seven hectares in the south-east of the town. The grand new collegiate church was to be the centre of this "city within the city" but the whole enterprise was cut short by the French Revolution (the remaining complex of buildings still forms a large and coherent whole).[4][5][6]

Notre-Dame was designed by Louis Beuque (1720–1797) from Besançon, a pupil of Jacques-François Blondel. Designs submitted by the engineer and architect Jean Querret [fr] (1703–1788) in 1759 had previously been rejected, and Beuque's first submission in 1760 was also deemed "not modern enough". Beuque's second design was accepted in 1761 and work on the church started the following year.
Work was carried on with several interruptions, and Beuque was fired in 1769. He was replaced by the sculptor and architect Gabriel Ignaz Ritter [de] (1732–1813), who modified some aspects of Beuque's design both on the outside and on the inside. The church was inaugurated (after several new delays) on 7 September 1785 by Franz Joseph Sigismund von Roggenbach, the bishop of Basel. At that point, the two planned steeples of the facade had not yet been built. In 1844, the north tower was added in a matching design; the south tower was never built.[7][8][9][10][4]

Description

Type-wise, Notre-Dame de Guebwiller is a basilica. Unlike most other churches, its monumental facade faces east, not west; this has to do with the configuration of the town at a time when the ramparts still stood. The semi-circular apse on the inside is concealed on the outside by an additional set of walls containing the sacristy, the chapter house and the archive; this accounts for the stern, block-like rear end of the sanctuary. The allegorical statues of the facade are the works of Gabriel Ignaz Ritter.[7][11][12]

The spacious and imposing interior is decorated with statues and reliefs, including the wooden

choir stalls and the 17 m (56 ft) high reredos, by Ritter and Fidelis Sporrer [de] (1731–1811), made between 1780 and 1788. A pair of 1833 statues by Sporrer's son Joseph replace works that had been destroyed during the French Revolution. Some paintings in the church are the work of the noted painters from Strasbourg, the sisters Monique Daniche (1736–1824) and Ursule Daniche (1741–1822). The pipe organ is a 1908 instrument in a colossal, Neoclassical 1785 organ case.[13][14]

The total length of the church (including the steps) is 71 m (233 ft). The inside length is 60 m (200 ft). The

nave is 24 m (79 ft) wide and the transept is 34 m (112 ft) wide (inside). The maximal exterior width is 41 m (135 ft). The vaults culminate at 28 m (92 ft).[15][16]

Gallery

  • Design by Louis Beuque (1765)
    Design by Louis Beuque (1765)
  • Upper part of the front
    Upper part of the front
  • Close-up of the facade
    Close-up of the facade
  • South side
    South side
  • Inside, looking towards the choir
    Inside, looking towards the choir
  • Inside, looking towards the entrance
    Inside, looking towards the entrance
  • The vaults of the transept
    The vaults of the transept
  • The pipe organ
    The pipe organ
  • Pulpit and choir
    Pulpit and choir
  • Detail of the choir stalls
    Detail of the choir stalls

References

  1. ^ "Abbaye". Plateforme ouverte du patrimoine. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  2. ^ Lehni, Roger; Storck, Joseph (1985). Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. Ingersheim, Haut-Rhin: SAEP Édition. p. 22.
  3. ^ Davatz, Jürg. "Die Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler : Baugeschichte - Architektur - Architekten Ein Beitrag zur Architekturgeschichte des französischen Frühklassizismus". zvab.com. Retrieved 22 May 2019. gehört die dreischiffige Säulen-Architravbasilika zu den hervorragenden und prächtigsten Kirchen des Frühklassizismus
  4. ^ a b Lehni. Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. p. 3.
  5. ^ Lehni. Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. pp. 8 and 10.
  6. ^ Legin, Philippe; Gissinger, Eve. Die Abtei Murbach. Murbach: Édition de la Paroisse. p. 13.
  7. ^ a b Lehni. Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. p. 8.
  8. ^ Lehni. Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. p. 14.
  9. ^ Lehni. Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. p. 5.
  10. ^ Lehni. Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. pp. 5, 8, and 11.
  11. ^ Lehni. Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. pp. 6 and 11.
  12. ^ Lehni. Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. p. 17.
  13. ^ Lehni. Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. pp. 7 and 18.
  14. ^ "Orgue de Guebwiller, Notre Dame". À la découverte de l'Orgue Orgues d'Alsace. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  15. ^ Lehni. Liebfrauenkirche zu Gebweiler. p. 6.
  16. ^ "Guebwiller, Église Notre-Dame". clochescomtoises.com. 3 February 2018. Retrieved 21 May 2019.