St. Michael in Berg am Laim, Munich

Coordinates: 48°07′30″N 11°37′49″E / 48.12500°N 11.63028°E / 48.12500; 11.63028
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 178.5.225.41 (talk) at 15:55, 20 January 2021. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

View of the church.

St Michael in Berg am Laim is a church in Munich, Bavaria, built from 1738 to 1751 by Johann Michael Fischer as Court Church for Prince Archbishop Clemens August of Cologne, a son of the Bavarian Elector Maximilian Emmanuel.

Clemens August owned Berg am Laim as a manor. It was also served by a Brotherhood of St. Michael the Archangel. The Catholic church is one of the chief works of the Bavarian rococo period.

High altar.

Architecture

The elegant façade with its twin towers provides a strong vertical accent was designed as the terminal feature of a street to the inner city which was never built. It is the only church of Fischer which was decorated in the rococo style with rich rocaille, maybe this was due to François de Cuvilliés the Elder, who served as a building inspector for this church.

Large round-headed arches divide the interior of the church in different sections. The central space is decorated by pilasters and columns and the corners are rounded off by several niches. The stucco and frescoes were created by Johann Baptist Zimmermann in 1743, the altars were constructed by Johann Baptist Straub.

The gilded figures on either side of the tabernacle are a contribution of Ignaz Günther. The painting of the high altar celebrating the archangel (by the Munich baroque painter Johann Andreas Wolff) and the statue of St. Roch (Andreas Faistenberger, 1690)) were created already before the construction of the church. The altarpiece of the side altar St. Norbert was painted by Ignaz Joseph Schilling (1744/1746).

During World War II the church was heavily damaged on 30 April 1945 by artillery hit in the nave, but afterwards restored.[citation needed]

See also

48°07′30″N 11°37′49″E / 48.12500°N 11.63028°E / 48.12500; 11.63028

External links