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Bach_Church,_Arnstadt Latitude and Longitude:

50°50′03″N 10°56′46″E / 50.8342°N 10.9461°E / 50.8342; 10.9461
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bach Church
Johann Sebastian Bach Church
Bachkirche
Bach Church
Bach Church is located in Thuringia
Bach Church
Bach Church
Bach Church is located in Germany
Bach Church
Bach Church
50°50′03″N 10°56′46″E / 50.8342°N 10.9461°E / 50.8342; 10.9461
CountryGermany
Denomination Lutheranism
History
Former name(s)New Church
StatusActive
Architecture
Functional status Parish church
Architectural type Aisleless church
Style Baroque
Years built1676–1683

Bach Church is the common name of a Protestant parish church in Arnstadt, Thuringia, Germany. It was officially named Johann-Sebastian-Bach-Kirche in 1935 because of its association with the composer Johann Sebastian Bach.

It was in this church that Bach played a harpsichord concerto after working for Johann Ernst III, Duke of Saxe-Weimar for 7 months.

A church on the premises named after St. Boniface burned down in 1581. A new church was built from 1676 to 1683 and simply named Neue Kirche (New church). It is a Baroque hall church with three tiers on all sides.

Wender-Orgel

The organ builder Johann Friedrich Wender from Mühlhausen built from 1699 to 1703 on the third tier of the church an organ with two manuals and 21 stops. It was inspected in June 1703 by Johann Sebastian Bach, then 18 years old, who was hired afterwards for the post of the organist at the church, his first position as an organist. He was succeeded in 1707 by his cousin Johann Ernst Bach who held the post to 1728. The organ was changed and restored several times. [1] [2] A replica of the organ was installed in the church of Pontaumur, Auvergne, which is used also for a regional Bach festival, Bach en Combrailles.

References

  1. ^ Zahn, J. Georg (1882). "Das Joh. Sebastian Bach-Denkmal". Zeitschrift für Instrumentenbau (in German). 2. Leipzig: 117–118.
  2. ^ Zahn, J. Georg (1882). "Das Joh. Sebastian Bach-Denkmal". Zeitschrift für Instrumentenbau (in German). 2. Leipzig: 129–130.

Literature

External links