Church of Saints Cosmas and Damian, Stade

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Ss. Cosmas and Damian Church
short: St. Cosmae or Cosmaekirche
full: Kirche Ss. Cosmae et Damiani
StadeStCosmaeDamiani.jpg
Ss. Cosmae et Damiani, east façade
Ss. Cosmae et Damiani
Ss. Cosmae et Damiani
Ss. Cosmas and Damian Church
Location within Lower Saxony
53°36′06″N 9°28′34″E / 53.6018°N 9.4762°E / 53.6018; 9.4762Coordinates: 53°36′06″N 9°28′34″E / 53.6018°N 9.4762°E / 53.6018; 9.4762
LocationStade
CountryGermany
DenominationLutheran
Previous denominationCatholic (till 1529)
WebsiteSt. Cosmae-St.Nicolai website (in German)
History
Statusparish church
DedicationCosmas and Damian
Associated people
Architecture
Functional statusactive
Architect(s)after 1659:
Architectural typeHall church
quire oriented
Groundbreaking13th century
Completedextended in the 15th century
after 1659 Great Fire reconstructed till 1684
Specifications
Spire height62.45 m (204.9 ft)
Materialsbrick
Administration
ParishSt. Cosmae-St. Nicolai[1]
Deanery [de]
Diocese [de]
SynodChurch of Hanover
Clergy
Senior pastor(s)Dr. Ekkehard Heise (city pastorate III)
Pastor(s)Götz Brakel (city pastorate IV)
Heike Kehlenbeck (city pastorate V)

The Church of Saints Cosmas and Damian, Stade (German: Ss. Cosmae et Damiani or St. Cosmae) is a Lutheran church in Stade, Germany.

Huss-Schnitger Organ

The church was built in the early 12th century and extended in the 17th century. The Baroque altar was crafted by  [de] in 1674–1677, and the organ was built in 1668–1675 by Berendt Hus and his nephew, the famous Arp Schnitger; the latter expanded the organ in 1688. Vincent Lübeck served as organist of St. Cosmae between 1675 and 1702.

References[]

  • Else Alpers, St. Cosmaekirche Stade, Stade: Schaumburg, 1981
  • Martin Boyken, „Die Malerei des Gertrudenaltars in St. Cosmae zu Stade. Die Jungfrau und der Teufel“, in: Stader Jahrbuch, N.F. vol. 42 (1952), pp. 89–100
  • Paul Krause, „Die Schmiedegitter der St. Cosmaekirche in Stade“, in: Stader Jahrbuch, N.F. vol. 44 (1954), pp. 171–174
  • Fritz Starcke, Die St. Cosmae-Kirche in Stade, Wienhausen and Celle: Niedersächsisches Bild-Archiv, 1928, (=Norddeutsche Kunstbücher; vol. 22)

External links[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ The parish, the 1834 merger of two previous congregations, upkeeps the name of the , demolished in 1834.


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