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Salvatorkirche: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 48°08′30″N 11°34′29″E / 48.14167°N 11.57472°E / 48.14167; 11.57472
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[[File:Salvatorkirche Munich I.jpg|thumb|Salvatorkirche.]]
[[File:Salvatorkirche Munich I.jpg|thumb|Salvatorkirche.]]
[[File:Salvatorkirche Munich II.jpg|thumb|Inside view]]
[[File:Salvatorkirche Munich II.jpg|thumb|Inside view]]
'''Salvatorkirche''' (Church of the Savior) is a [[gothic architecture|gothic]] church in [[Munich]], [[Germany]], the former cemetery church of the [[Frauenkirche (Munich)|Frauenkirche]] (Cathedral of Our Blessed Lady). Since 1829 the church has been used by [[Greek Orthodox Church|Greek Orthodox]] Christians and it was the headquarters of the Metropolitan of Germany and Exarch of Central Europe.<ref>Metropolitan Augoustinos, metropolitan, Greek Metropolitan of Germany, exarch of Central Europe (within the Ecumenical Patriarchate)</ref> It is called "Transfiguration of the Savior" by the Greek Orthodox community.
'''Salvatorkirche''' (Church of the Savior) is a [[gothic architecture|gothic]] church in [[Munich]], [[Germany]], the former cemetery church of the [[Frauenkirche (Munich)|Frauenkirche]] (Cathedral of Our Blessed Lady). Since 1829 the church has been used by [[Greek Orthodox Church|Greek Orthodox]] Christians and it was the headquarters of the Metropolitan of Germany and Exarch of Central Europe.<ref>Metropolitan Augoustinos, metropolitan, Greek Metropolitan of Germany, exarch of Central Europe (within the Ecumenical Patriarchate)</ref> It is called "Transfiguration of the Savior" by the Greek Orthodox community. Owner of the Church is not the Orthodox Church, but the Free State of [[Bavaria]].


It was built in [[Gothic architecture|late Gothic style]] in 1493, later it was used as a storarge. [[Leo von Klenze]] renovated the church for the use of the Greek community in Munich and designed also the Ikonostasis. The exterior was reconstructed in a gothic style, baroque parts were removed. During the nazi-period in Germany the famous mathematician [[Constantin Carathéodory]] worked as a church council.
It was built in [[Gothic architecture|late Gothic style]] in 1493, later it was used as a storarge. [[Leo von Klenze]] renovated the church for the use of the Greek community in Munich and designed also the Ikonostasis. The exterior was reconstructed in a gothic style, baroque parts were removed. During the nazi-period in Germany the famous mathematician [[Constantin Carathéodory]] worked as a church council.

Revision as of 13:13, 29 May 2014

48°08′30″N 11°34′29″E / 48.14167°N 11.57472°E / 48.14167; 11.57472

Salvatorkirche.
Inside view

Salvatorkirche (Church of the Savior) is a gothic church in Munich, Germany, the former cemetery church of the Frauenkirche (Cathedral of Our Blessed Lady). Since 1829 the church has been used by Greek Orthodox Christians and it was the headquarters of the Metropolitan of Germany and Exarch of Central Europe.[1] It is called "Transfiguration of the Savior" by the Greek Orthodox community. Owner of the Church is not the Orthodox Church, but the Free State of Bavaria.

It was built in late Gothic style in 1493, later it was used as a storarge. Leo von Klenze renovated the church for the use of the Greek community in Munich and designed also the Ikonostasis. The exterior was reconstructed in a gothic style, baroque parts were removed. During the nazi-period in Germany the famous mathematician Constantin Carathéodory worked as a church council.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Metropolitan Augoustinos, metropolitan, Greek Metropolitan of Germany, exarch of Central Europe (within the Ecumenical Patriarchate)

References

As of this edit, this article uses content from "St. Salvator", which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed.