St. Martin, Idstein
Church in Idstein, Germany From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Church in Idstein, Germany From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
St. Martin is the name of a Catholic parish and church in Idstein, Rheingau-Taunus-Kreis, Germany. The official name of the church is Katholische Pfarrkirche St. Martin. The name of the parish became St. Martin Idsteiner Land on 1 January 2017, when it was merged with five other parishes. The parish is part of the Diocese of Limburg.
St. Martin | |
---|---|
Katholische Pfarrkirche St. Martin Gemeinde St. Martin Idsteiner Land | |
50°13′8″N 8°16′0″E | |
Location | Idstein, Germany |
Denomination | Catholic |
Website | www |
History | |
Dedication | St. Martin |
Consecrated | 5 June 1965 |
Architecture | |
Architect(s) | Johannes Krahn |
Specifications | |
Capacity | 450 |
Length | 45 metres (148 ft) |
Width | 14 metres (46 ft) |
Height | 14 metres (46 ft) |
Administration | |
Diocese | Limburg |
Laity | |
Music group(s) |
|
St. Martin is the patron saint of Idstein, to whom a Gothic church was dedicated in 1330. The present building, designed by architect Johannes Krahn, was consecrated in 1965. It replaced a church built in 1888 in Gothic Revival style and dedicated to Mary Magdalene. The earlier church was too small for the congregation growing after World War II.
After restoration in 2003, a new organ was installed in 2006. Church music in services and concerts, performed by several groups including a children's choir and ensembles playing historic instruments, have received attention in the Rhein-Main Region. The parish is in long-term ecumenical contact with the main Protestant church of the town, the Unionskirche, which includes two regular ecumenical services and concerts performed by joint groups of both churches.
The beginning of Christianity in Idstein is not documented. When the Idstein Castle was first mentioned in 1102, the area belonged to the Diocese of Trier. Idstein possibly had a church in Romanesque style, which was replaced in 1330 by a Gothic church dedicated to St. Martin, the patron saint of Idstein. It was the church of a Chorherrenstift founded in 1333 for six canons, and became the Protestant church with the Reformation, named Unionskirche in 1917.[1]
During the Reformation, Idstein became Lutheran beginning in 1540 under Philipp I of Nassau-Idstein . The last Catholic canon left the town in 1553, which then had no Catholic congregation until the beginning of the 19th century.[1] In 1806, Frederick Augustus, Duke of Nassau allowed the practice of the Catholic cult again. Thirteen families were permitted to use the chapel of the Schloss.[2] The dukedom became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1866. In 1884, the minister Wilhelm Schilo began the building of a church for a growing congregation, collecting money all over Germany.[1] The architect Aloys Vogt, from the local Baugewerbeschule (School for building trades), designed a hall church with two aisles in Gothic Revival style, built from 1887 to 1888.[3] The building, seating 135 people, was dedicated to Mary Magdalene (Magdalenenkirche) by Bishop Karl Klein on 8 October 1888. The Catholic population of Idstein grew considerably after World War II, when many refugees and displaced persons moved to Idstein.[1][2] Minister Hans Usinger first built a Gemeindehaus (community center) and pursued from 1961 the building of a larger church.[2] The Magdalenenkirche was dynamited in 1963.[3][4] The building of the new church began in 1963. It was consecrated, again to St. Martin, on 5 June 1965 by Bishop Wilhelm Kempf.[5][6]
On 1 January 2017, the parish became part of the larger St. Martin Idsteiner Land parish, which includes five other former parishes: Maria Königin in Niedernhausen, St. Nikolaus von Flüe in Idstein-Wörsdorf, St. Martha in Niedernhausen-Engenhahn, St. Michael in Niedernhausen-Oberjosbach and St. Thomas in Waldems.[7][8] A service was held on 5 February by Wolfgang Rösch.[7]
Professor Johannes Krahn, who built several churches and early skyscrapers such as the Beehive House in Frankfurt am Main, designed a space recalling elements of an early Romanesque Basilica. In a simple shape, a single long nave is concluded by a semicircle choir around the altar. On the right side the wall opens to a side chapel, reminiscent of a transept. The outer walls are sandstone, visible both inside and outside.[3] Light flows in from a band of windows under the plain wooden ceiling. The combination of materials has been compared to Le Corbusier.[5] The building recalls the austere style of sacred architecture of the 1950s.[3]
The floor is of Jura marble, the altar, ambo, baptismal font and tabernacle are made of Lahn marble. The wall behind the altar held a neo-Gothic crucifixion scene of Mary, John, and Mary Magdalene under the cross, from the Magdalenenkirche.[3] Low stained glass windows forming the Stations of the Cross were designed by Paul Corazolla from Berlin.[5] The first organ was built by E. F. Walcker & Cie. and consecrated in 1974. It was placed on the right side in the opening for the chapel, visible to the congregation. The free-standing bell tower, housing four bells, is 42 m high.[3]
The walls of the church were completely restored in 2003.[5] At the same time the altar was moved closer to the congregation, making more room for the choir. The baptismal font was relocated from the chapel to the front, opposite the ambo. The tabernacle, which had been where the baptismal font is now, and the crucifixion scene were moved to the chapel, creating a chapel for adoration. The restoration works were directed by Franz Josef Hamm from Limburg. The new cross above the altar was created by a group of young people in preparation for confirmation. During the restoration the organ had to be taken apart. The parish decided not to restore it but to have a new organ built.[9]
The organ was built by Orgelbau Mebold and consecrated on 22 January 2006. The instrument has 1,888 pipes and 33 stops on two manuals and a pedalboard. The layout of its great division (Hauptwerk) reflects the classic organ construction of the Baroque period, whilst the swell division (or swell box) (Schwellwerk) has the timbre of the Romantic, which makes it possible to play a wide range of the organ repertoire from different eras.[9][10] The first organ concert on the Mebold organ was played by Dan Zerfaß, organist of the Worms Cathedral.[11] The organ is used mostly in services, but has been played in concerts of artists such as Kalevi Kiviniemi.[12] In 2005 Graham Waterhouse was the soloist in the premiere of his Cello Concerto in the chamber version on 5 August 2005.[13] Giora Feidman and Matthias Eisenberg performed a duo programme on 14 November 2008. Christian Schmitt played in 2007 with the chamber choir of the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst Frankfurt, conducted by Wolfgang Schäfer,[10] who returned in 2010 to conduct the Frankfurter Kammerchor.[14]
Franz Fink has been the cantor of St. Martin since 1992, conducting five musical groups, a children's choir Kinderchor St. Martin, the Chor St. Martin, the Martinis (a chamber choir of mostly young people), the Orchester St. Martin, and the Barock-Consort St. Martin on period instruments. The church choir was named Chor St. Martin in 1973. The Martinis were founded in 1988 by Thomas Gabriel as a youth choir.[15][16]
All groups perform in services, including masses such as Haydn's Missa brevis Sancti Joannis de Deo, Leopold Mozart's Missa in C, K. 115, Mozart's Missa brevis in D minor, K. 65 and Spatzenmesse, Monteverdi's Missa in F from Selva morale e spirituale, the mass for double choir from Missodia Sionia by Michael Praetorius, the Missa aulica by František Xaver Brixi, the Missa secundi toni by Johann Ernst Eberlin, and masses by Johann Caspar Ferdinand Fischer, Hans Leo Hassler, Alberich Mazak, Flor Peeters and Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel. The repertory includes motets such as Bohuslav Matěj Černohorský's Laudetur Jesus Christus, Kuhnau's Tristis est anima mea, Rheinberger's Abendlied and Bruckner's Locus iste.
The groups have also included contemporary music, such as that by Heinz Werner Zimmermann, Pärt's De profundis, Barber's Agnus Dei, Sandström's Es ist ein Ros entsprungen, and Whitacre's Lux Aurumque. The Martinis have performed Bach cantatas, Gottes Zeit ist die allerbeste Zeit, BWV 106 (Actus tragicus), in Geistliche Abendmusik (a Vespers service) on 20 November 2005, and Brich dem Hungrigen dein Brot, BWV 39, in a cantata service.
Concerts and services have also been performed by guest ensembles such as the Ukrainian chamber choir OREYA.[17] The choirs of St. Martin travelled to England in 2006 to attend services and evensong in Christ Church, Oxford, Salisbury Cathedral and St Paul's Cathedral, London. They travelled to Leipzig in 2008 to hear the Thomanerchor in Motette and services.[16] In 2009 they sang with other choirs of the diocese in the Limburg Cathedral from the Missa primi toni octo vocum of Stefano Bernardi for double chorus, conducted by Joachim Dreher and Franz Fink.[18] In 2016, they performed at the Cathedral the premiere of the oratorio Laudato si' with the choirs of Liebfrauen, Frankfurt, conducted by the composer Peter Reulein. The performance was repeated at the Frankfurt Cathedral in 2017.[19]
On 26 December 2019, the Hessian broadcaster hr4 broadcast a Christmas service, in which a project choir of mostly choir members performed Rutter's Angels' Carol and Christmas Lullaby, among others.[20]
In addition to singing in mass on Sundays and feast days, the choirs added irregular liturgies of Abendlob, in the tradition of the Anglican Evensong, singing psalms, Magnificat and Nunc dimittis. An Abendlob on the occasion of the Kreuzfest (Feast of the Cross) in 2018 had Psalm 100 set by Charles Villiers Stanford, Magnificat and Nunc dimittis in D by Charles Wood, Mozart's Ave verum corpus and Rheinberger's Abendlied.[21] An Abendlob in Advent 2019 contained, among others, Hammerschmidt's Machet die Tore weit, Hassler's Dixit Maria, Vivaldi's Magnificat, RV 610, and Biebl's Ave Maria.[22]
In 2023 the three church choirs celebrated their jubilees, Chor St. Martin and Kinderchor St. Martin 50 years, and the Martinis chamber choir 35 years. A service on 2 July was sung by all choirs and the orchestra, including Tambling's Messe in G, Mozart's Ave verum corpus and Rutter's Nun danket alle Gott. An exhibition presented related concert posters and paper clippings. Some members from the beginning are still singing, including the long-time priest Klaus Schmidt. Other former members were also celebrated at a reception.
An annual choral concert with soloists and orchestra has been performed by the combined choirs. Specialized orchestras on period instruments, namely La Beata Olanda (Freiburg), Antichi Strumenti (Mulhouse), Main-Barockorchester Frankfurt and L'arpa festante (Munich), accompanied works by Bach, Buxtehude, Handel, Haydn and Schütz in historically informed performances, also the church's groups Capella lignea and Barock-Consort St. Martin. Several concerts were collaborations with other choirs; some were ecumenical projects with Protestant choirs, the choir of the Protestant church of Geisenheim (now: Neue Rheingauer Kantorei) and, from the Idsteiner Kantorei from 2003 the Unionskirche in Idstein conducted by Carsten Koch. Two concerts of large works also included the De Wase Kantorij, a choir from the Belgian sister city Zwijndrecht, in international collaboration.
In the following table, the regular conductor Franz Fink is not mentioned, only guest conductors.
Date | Composer | Work | Conductor / Choir / Orchestra | Soloists | Location | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
15 March 1998[23] | Bach | St Matthew Passion (details) |
Chor St. Martin La Beata Olanda |
|
||||||
8 May 1999[24] | Puccini | Messa di Gloria | Thassilo Schlenther
Kammerphilharmonie Rhein-Main |
|
| |||||
28 May 2000[25][26] Part of Idsteiner Bachtage |
Bach |
|
Chor St. Martin Antichi Strumenti |
|
||||||
20 October 2001[27][28] | Thassilo Schlenther
Kammerphilharmonie Rhein-Main |
|
| |||||||
15 June 2002[16][29] Part of Hessentag |
Haydn | Die Schöpfung | Edwin Müller
Antichi Strumenti |
|
||||||
29 June 2003[30] | Handel |
Antichi Strumenti |
Katia Plaschka | Unionskirche | ||||||
|
Bach | Christmas Oratorio |
Antichi Strumenti |
|
||||||
9 October 2005[32] Choral Music from England |
|
|||||||||
5 June 2006[33] | Rutter |
Kammerphilharmonie Rhein-Main |
Janina Moeller | |||||||
11 March 2007[34] | Buxtehude |
|
|
|||||||
18 May 2008[35] | Mozart | Great Mass in C minor |
Kammerphilharmonie Rhein-Main |
|
||||||
5 April 2009[36] | Bach | St Matthew Passion |
La Beata Olanda |
|||||||
|
Verdi | Messa da Requiem | Carsten Koch
Nassauische Kammerphilharmonie |
|||||||
18 September 2011[39] | Handel | Messiah |
Main-Barockorchester Frankfurt |
|||||||
3 June 2012[40] Sacred Choral Music of the 20th and 21st centuries |
|
|
{{Classical concert row |
id = Mass in B minor | date = 29 September 2013[16][41] |
composer = Bach | work = Mass in B minor (details) | choir =
| ||
13 July 2014[42] | Heinrich Schütz |
|
Barock-Consort St. Martin |
|||||||
16 November 2014[42] |
Barock-Consort St. Martin |
Janina Moeller | ||||||||
8 February 2015[43][44] |
Karl Jenkins | Carsten Koch
Nassauische Kammerphilharmonie |
||||||||
15 November 2015[45] |
Nassauische Kammerphilharmonie |
|
||||||||
16 April 2016[46] | Haydn | Die Schöpfung | Carsten Koch
Nassauische Kammerphilharmonie |
|
||||||
|
Peter Reulein | Laudato si' – Ein franziskanisches Magnificat (premiere) | Peter Reulein
Ensemble Colorito |
|
| |||||
16 September 2018 Abendlob[47] |
|
|
Chor St. Martin | Andreas Richter, organ | ||||||
8 December 2018 Weihnachts-Oratorium[48] | J. S. Bach |
|
Nassauische Kammerphilharmonie |
|
Unionskirche | |||||
1 September 2019[49][50][51] |
Monteverdi | Vespro della Beata Vergine |
Capella San Marco |
|
||||||
6 May 2023[52] |
Martìn Palmeri Peter Reulein |
Misa a Buenos Aires Te Deum |
Carsten Koch
Hessische Kammerphilharmonie |
|
||||||
26 November 2023[53] |
W. A. Mozart Arvo Pärt |
Requiem Fratres, Da pacem Domine |
Hessische Kammerphilharmonie |
|
||||||
5 May 2024[54][55] |
J. S. Bach |
Nassau-Barock |
|
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.