Church of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary (Most)

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Church of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary (2006)
Church of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary (2006)

The Church of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary (in Czech Kostel Nanebevzetí Panny Marie) is a church building in Most, a city in the Ústí nad Labem Region of the Czech Republic.

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[edit] Older building

The dean church in Most, which stood in the middle of the church yard near the road to Žatec, burned down in 1515, and only the eastern crypt and the inner peripheral brickwork of the western tower could be saved. (The foundation of this church is indicated in 1253 till 1257 and indirectly proven by a document of pope Bonifacio VIII from 1296. The construction was originally an early Gothic basilica of three naves.)

[edit] Construction

The building of the new church began on August 20, 1517, when the cornerstone was laid. The designer was Jakob Heilmann from Schweinfurt. He proposed the church as a big hall of tree naves, with inside supports with a pentagonal presbytery and a prismatic tower with a gallery in the main elevation. The northern wall contains a vestibule, and a sacristy is located in the north-western wall.

During the first year, demolition work was carried out. Heilmann handed over the project in 1518, and control of the building works was taken over initially by the foreman Jörg (Georg) of Maulbron and later by another foreman called Peter (possibly Heilmann).

The vaults of the peripheral chapels were finished during the second decade of the 16th century, then the inner pillars were erected and placed at the ends of the arch ribs.

The church was prepared for vaulting in 1532, then the windows were placed and the vaulting ribs were dressed. The carcassing was finished in 1549, and the renaissance portals came into existence in the second half of the 16th century. Unfortunately the church burnt out in 1578, and was finally repaired by 1602. The church was blessed in 1597.

[edit] Later repairs

A new roof was put on the church in 1650. The current main altar was constructed during 17351739. The altar decoration was made in the workshop of the sculptor Bartolomeo Eder and the main altar picture was produced by Josef Kramolín - both in 1773. A boundary wall round the cemetery, church and the ossuary was ruined in 1840. The last big repair was made during 18801883, during which the interior was reshaped into the Gothic style, and a part of the baroque inventory was removed. New gothic paint was used, and equipment was installed in the new gothic style. The plaster renovation of the outer walls, as well as a treatment of the stone parts was made in 1932.

[edit] Transport of the building

During the sixties, Most's historic center was completely destroyed to make room for the expanding lignite mines, a process that lasted until 1970. Unlike other historical building it was decided to save the church by moving it away from mining area.

An expert committee was set up by the Ministry of Culture of Czechoslovakia to supervise the project, presided over by academician Stanislav Bechyně. From 1969 the committee was led by Alois Myslivec.

To move the building, a variant on a bow path was chosen. The transfer was overseen by the firm Transfera Praha, an organisation of the Czech Ministry of Culture, and was performed by Průmstav Pardubice and Škoda Plzeň.

Prior to moving the building, the peripheral masonry, the bearing and supporting pillars were reinforced, and the remainder of the western tower was demolished. The church circumference was reinforced by a concrete ring and the church was gripped by a steel framework construction on the inner as well as outer sides.

The preparation work lasted seven years, as it was also necessary to demolish all houses in the transfer path and fill in the former opencast mine.

53 transport trucks were set on special rails, which were inserted under all statically important points of the church. These transport trucks worked using computer controlled hydraulics, as were four booms used to pull the church. During movement of the church on the road section, rails which had already been passed over were moved from behind the building to in front of it, allowing them to be used again.

Between September 30 and October 27, 1975, the church was moved a distance of 841.1 meters at a velocity of 1–3 centimeters per minute to the vicinity of the old hospital, and it was set on an iron-concrete two-storied foundation. A small church of St. Ghost was also moved during October. After the move was completed, restoration work went on until 1988, and the church was solemnly blessed again in 1993.

This building was mentioned in Guinness Book of World Records as the heaviest building ever moved on wheels.

[edit] Architecture

This church has only one tower, conforming to the South-German gothic layout. Its interior walls are plain, and the peripheral walls are broken by two rows of windows. The lower windows belong to the individual chapels and the upper ones belong to the flank naves of the hall. The inside of the church forms a big hall, divided into three naves by seven pairs of octahedral columns. Between the counterforts are 16 chapels, two side vestibules, a sacristy, a double worm staircase on the eastern side and a worm staircase on the western side. Each of the chapels has its own ribbed vault and is dedicated to its donor — the guilds, rich citizens and one to the abbot Bartolomeo of Osek.

The church contains an exposition of the Gothic and Renaissance art of the north-western Bohemia, and the church basement is used as an exhibition space for the North-Bohemian Gallery.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 50°31′04″N 13°38′55″E / 50.51778, 13.64861

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