St. Andreas, Hildesheim

St. Andrew's
Church of St. Andrew's

  • German: Andreaskirche
  • or simply Sankt Andreas

St. Andrew's, amidst the urban roofscape
St. Andrew's
Location within Lower Saxony
52°09′06″N 09°57′00″E / 52.15167°N 9.95000°E / 52.15167; 9.95000Coordinates: 52°09′06″N 09°57′00″E / 52.15167°N 9.95000°E / 52.15167; 9.95000
Location Hildesheim
Country Germany
Denomination Lutheran
Website www.andreaskirche.com
History
Dedication
Architecture
Status parish church
Functional status active
Architectural type hall church
Style Gothic
Groundbreaking late 14th century
Completed 1504 (1504)
1883 (tower)
Specifications
Length 80 metres (260 ft)
Width 35 metres (115 ft)
Nave height 27 metres (89 ft)
Spire height 114.5 metres (376 ft)
Bells 4 (4)
Administration
Parish St.-Andreas-Gemeinde, Hildesheim
Deanery Hildesheim-Sarstedt (Kirchenkreis)
Synod Church of Hanover

The church of St. Andreas is the principal Lutheran church of Hildesheim, Germany, not to be confounded with the Catholic Hildesheim Cathedral. Its tower is 114.5 metres (376 ft) tall, making it the tallest church tower in Lower Saxony; it is accessible (364 steps) and offers a panoramic view of both the city and surrounding countryside.

History

The earliest church building on the Treibeinsel dedicated to the Apostle Andreas (Andrew) was a simple pre-Romanesque chapel, which already existed at the death of Bishop Bernward in 1022. Bishop Godehard was brought here after his death in 1038 so the people could mourn.

During the romanesque period, the center of the market and workshops was relocated from the swampy lowlands between Domburg and Michaeliskriche ("Old Market") to near St. Andreas. The chapel was subsequently replaced with a romanesque church with a strong westwork.

St. Andreas in 1850

The building of the gothic church, in the basilica style and romanesque westwork, was begun at the end of the fourteenth century, the choir in 1389, the northern nave in 1404, and the tower in 1503. By 1504, the nave with its side altars was finished and all that remained to be completed was the tower. This was only done in 1883-1890, when the tower reached its current height. The interior, with the quire and the radiating side chapels to the east, was modeled after the French cathedrals.

Like market churches in many other German dioceses, St. Andreas represented bourgeois self-confidence in the High Middle Ages in comparison to the lordship of the Bishops, manifested in the cathedral. During the Reformation, this old question of authority was combined with the religious question. Consequently, in 1542, St. Andreas became the first church in Hildesheim to support Lutheranism; it was also there where Johannes Bugenhagen initiated the new church order. This is remembered in the 1995 Brunnen Memorial by Ulrich Henn, which is located in the southern of forecourt the church.

The nave

The church burned down during the Second World War on 22 March 1945, and only the ruined outer wall remained standing. The church had already been damaged on 22 February and 3 March 1945. From 1956-1965, St. Andreas was completely rebuilt as an almost exact copy of the original. Opposite the church, the Upended Sugarloaf, a famous half timbered-house with a very unusual shape, was rebuilt in 2009/2010.

Bells

The tower

In the tower hang four bells from 1725, 1738, 1632, and 1963:

No.
 
name
 
year cast
 
foundry,
place of cast

 
diameter
(m)
weight
(kg)
strike tone
 
loan by the presbytery
of the formerly
Lutheran church of
1 St. Andreas 1963 Rincker Bros., Sinn 2.15 metres (7.1 ft) 6,500 kilograms (14,300 lb) G flat0 own bell
2 Osanna 1632 1.75 metres (5.7 ft) 3,000 kilograms (6,600 lb) B0 St. Mary's, Danzig
3 Maria 1738 1.36 metres (4.5 ft) 1,500 kilograms (3,300 lb) D flat1 St. George's, Rastenburg
4 Petrus 1725 1.22 metres (4.0 ft) 1,300 kilograms (2,900 lb) E flat1 Mühlhausen in West Prussia

Measurements

The church's dimensions attest to the prosperity and self-confidence of the Hildesheim citizens. St. Andreas is with its 114.5 m tower one of the tallest churches of the world.

A fountain near St. Andreas

References

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