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Franciscan Church, Vienna

Coordinates: 48°12′22″N 16°22′28″E / 48.2061°N 16.3744°E / 48.2061; 16.3744
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Franciscan Church
Franciscan Church in Vienna
Religion
AffiliationCatholic Church
LeadershipP. Gottfried Wegleitner OFM[1]
Year consecrated1611
Location
LocationVienna, Austria
Franciscan Church, Vienna is located in Vienna
Franciscan Church, Vienna
Shown within Vienna
Franciscan Church, Vienna is located in Austria
Franciscan Church, Vienna
Franciscan Church, Vienna (Austria)
Geographic coordinates48°12′22″N 16°22′28″E / 48.2061°N 16.3744°E / 48.2061; 16.3744
Architecture
Architect(s)F. Bonaventura Daum
TypeChurch
StyleBaroque
Groundbreaking1603
Completed1611
Specifications
Direction of façadeNW
Length65 m
Width20 m
Width (nave)12 m
Website
www.franziskaner.at

The Franciscan Church (German: Franziskanerkirche), also known as the Church of St. Jerome, is a Roman Catholic parish church dedicated to Saint Jerome and located in the historic city center of Vienna, Vienna's 1st district (Innere Stadt). It is the church of the Franciscan Order in Vienna.

Interior

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Erected in 1603 the outside facade of the Franciscan Church is Renaissance in style. However, its interior is Baroque. The high altar depicting the Virgin Mary was designed by Andrea Pozzo in 1707. The church holds the oldest organ in Vienna. The carved Baroque organ was designed by Johann Wockerl in 1642.

History

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The Franciscan Order had its first monastery in Vienna from 1451 with St. Theobald ob der Laimgrube in the Mariahilf district, which was destroyed in 1529. Two other monasteries (at St. Rupert until 1545, St. Nikolaus in Nikolai and Grünangergasse) soon became too small.[2]

In 1589, after prolonged negotiations, the municipality of Vienna ceded to the Franciscans the empty convent of the Penitents, which had been built from 1383 to 1387. About forty years earlier, the Counter-Reformer Petrus Canisius had preached regularly in the church. When the Franciscans took over the building - in which former strumpets lived as penitents - the church was rebuilt, incorporating old components.[3] As a result, Vienna's only sacred building in the Renaissance style is still often adorned with Gothic elements. The church was completed in 1607, the monastery for 200 brothers in 1630. The design of the interior of the church was completed only around 1720. Today the monastery belongs to the Franciscan Province of Austria.

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Notes

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  1. ^ Official Website of the Archdiocese of Vienna
  2. ^ wien.franziskaner.at: Geschichte, retrieved 18 October 2021.
  3. ^ Diözesanarchiv Wien, Annemarie Fenzl und Johann Weißensteiner (1997), Erzbischöflichen Dom- und Diözesanmuseum Wien (ed.), Braunsberger und Petrus Canisius in Wien: Ausstellung aus Anlaß seines 400. Todesjahres. gestaltet vom Diözesanarchiv Wien im Erzbischöflichen Dom- und Diözesanmuseum vom 13. Mai bis 28. Juni 1997. Katalog / bearb. von Annemarie Fenzl und Johann Weißensteiner, Wien{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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