Johann Friedrich Wender
German organ builder (1655–1729) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
German organ builder (1655–1729) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johann Friedrich Wender (baptized 6 December 1655 – 13 June 1729) was a German organ builder who had his workshop in Mühlhausen.
Born in Dörna, Thuringia, Wender collaborated with Johann Sebastian Bach, who obtained his first position as an organist in Arnstadt from 1703, after he had inspected and demonstrated a new organ which Wender had built there. In 1707 Bach moved to Mühlhausen, where Wender worked. Wender died in Dörna.
Notable students of Wender include his son Christian Friedrich Wender, his son-in-law Johann Nikolaus Becker, Johann Christian Dauphin and Johann Jacob John .
Year | Location | Building | Image | Manuals | Stops | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1689–1691 | Mühlhausen | Divi Blasii | II/P | 29 | expanding, partly new | |
1695 | Seligenstadt | Abtei | II/P | 31 | ||
1699–1703 | Arnstadt | New Church | II/P | 29 | new organ for the new church (today: Bach Church) which replaced the burned St. Bonifatius | |
1700 | Weimar | Stadtkirche | restoration | |||
1708 | Mühlhausen | Divi Blasii | III/P | 38 | Rebuilding following Bach's suggestions. The survival of Bach's specifications has allowed the reconstruction of this lost organ. | |
1714 | Erfurt | St. Severi | II/P | 24 | Case extant | |
1714–1717 | Merseburg | Dom- und Schlosskirche | IV/P | 66 | repair and completion of the instrument begun in 1695 by Zacharias Theißner | |
1716–1722 | Merseburg | St. Maximi | new organ, inspected on 11/12 May 1722 by Thomaskantor Johann Kuhnau and Georg Friedrich Kauffmann |
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