St. Andrew's Church, Gentofte Municipality
St. Andrew's Church | |
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St. Andrew's Church | |
Coordinates: 55°45′42.9″N 12°34′8.7″E / 55.761917°N 12.569083°E | |
Location | Ordrup, Gentofte Municipality |
Country | Denmark |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Website | Official website |
History | |
Founded | 1874 |
Dedication | Saint Anne |
Architecture | |
Status | Church |
Functional status | Active |
Architect(s) | Ludvig Knudsen |
Style | National Romantic |
Administration | |
Diocese | Copenhagen |
St. Andrew's Church (Danish: Sankt Andreas Kirke) is a Roman Catholic church in Ordrup, Gentofte Municipality, Copenahgen, Denmark.
History
The church was built at the initiative of Polly Berling, the widow after book printer and Berlingske Tidende-owner Carl Berling. She had converted to Catholicism in 1869. The couple lived at Ordrupshøj in Ordrup.
After her husband's death in 1871, Polly Berling was able to dispose freely of the land and wealth and wanted to do something for her new faith. Her original intension was to build an opåhanage led by Sisters of St. Joseph on the estate but Father Hermann Grüder, Prefect of Denmark, convinced her that there was a greater need for a Jesuit boy's school.[1]
The architect Ludvig Knudsen was commissioned to design the building. Construction began in 1871 and it was consecrated on 25 May 1873. It was the third Roman Catholic church to be completed in Denmark sin ce the Reformation. The church was until 1953 used by the Society of Jesus in Denmark. During her visits to Rome, Polly Berling had been particularly fund of San Andrea delle Fratte and the new church and school was therefore named after St. Andrew.
The school was originally located in rural surroundings. It was also open to non-Catholics but initially only had some 40 students. The number increased to over 200 after the surrounding fields were built over with single family detached homes in about 1900. The growth of the northern suburbs also created the basis of a local congregation and St. Andrew's Church was converted into a Roman Catholic parish church in 1913. The German Jesuits moved back to Germany after the end of World War I and the school closed in 1920.
The Jesuits returned to Germany after the end of World War I and the church therefore had to close in 1920.
The parish was taken over by French Dominicans in 1953. This happened at the initiative of bishopJohannes Theodor Suhr. The Dominicans used the church until 1976. The church was reduced to an annex church in 2008 when St. Andrew's Parish was merged with St. Thérès's Parish in Hellerup.
Architecture
The church is built in red brick. Its colorful interior was painted white in 1059 but the original colors were reconstructed in 2007.
References
- ↑ "Sankt Andreas Kirke". Sankt Andreas Kirke (in Danish). Retrieved 27 January 2017.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sankt Andreas Kirke (katolsk). |