All Saints' Church, Leipzig

The All Saints Church in Leipzig – also Church of the Ascension, All Saints' English and American Episcopal Church, Germanized Anglikanische Kirche and Anglo-Amerikanische Kirche – was an Anglican church building in the Bachviertel neighbourhood in the borough of Leipzig-Mitte.[1]

All Saints' Church
German: Anglikanische Kirche or German: Anglo-Amerikanische Kirche
All Saints Church in Leipzig, around 1900
Map
51°20′12.7″N 12°21′40.8″E / 51.336861°N 12.361333°E / 51.336861; 12.361333
AddressSebastian-Bach-Strasse 1, 04109 Leipzig
CountryGermany
Previous denominationAnglican
History
StatusChurch (former)
EventsLeipzig bombings
Architecture
Functional statusDemolished
Architect(s)Oskar Mothes
Architectural typeChurch (former)
StyleEarly English Gothic Revival
Years built1884 – 1885
Closed4 December 1943
Demolishedafter 1945

History of the church

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Anglican community

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In the 19th century, a large number of English and American artists, students[2] and business people lived in the cultural and trade fair city of Leipzig. As a result, the first or regular Anglican services were held for the Anglo-American community as early as 1862/64.[3] Initially, the Lutheran St. Thomas Church and the University of Music and Theatre were used for this purpose.[4] To remedy this, the Saxon architect Oskar Mothes was commissioned to plan the construction of the church in 1870. His designs for the building project were used for the Anglican St. Luke's Church[5] in the bohemian town of Karlovy Vary, which was built between 1876 and 1877 (as a kind of "twin sister"), which may have delayed the start of construction in Leipzig. The consecration of the church in Bohemia took place on 24 June 1877.

 
Twin sister: The Anglican St. Luke's Church in what was then Karlsbad (Boehmen)
 
The church in Leipzig, Sebastian-Bach-Strasse 1 corner Schreberstrasse, view from the north-west, on the left the Luther Church on the site originally intended for the Anglican Church

In 1883, the city of Leipzig gave the Anglican community building land in Bismarckstrasse (later Ferdinand-Lassalle-Strasse) at the northwest end of Johannapark.[3] However, due to the prestigious location, those responsible swapped the building site a short time later for the site of the nearby[6] Luther Church, which had been built at the same time, on the corner of Sebastian-Bach-Strasse and Schreberstrasse. In May 1884, the ceremonial laying of the foundation stone took place in the presence of the Anglican Bishop for Northern and Central Europe, Jonathan Titcomb, and prominent representatives of the city.[3] The church was built with the support of the British and US consulates.[4] The consecration of the Church of the Ascension took place in June 1885, and the name was later changed to All Saints Church.[3]

Mothes based his plans on the English early Gothic style. The floor plan of the church was similar to a Latin cross. There were side aisles in the nave. A high timber roof truss rose above the nave. The front on Sebastian-Bach-Strasse was decorated with a rose window, and a long vestibule connected to the entrance area. A church tower in the left entrance area, which had originally been planned, was never built.[3]

The Anglo-American Church housed an pipe organ.[7] From 1894 to 1898, Thomas James Crawford was the organist here.[8]

With the outbreak of war in 1914, the active community dissolved.[4]

Subsequent use and war destruction

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During the Weimar Republic, the building was used by a German free church, the Pentecostal congregation "Christliche Gemeinde e. V.".[4] During the Allied air raids on Leipzig on 4 December 1943 and in the spring of 1945, the church, like other buildings of the southern Bachstrasse was badly damaged.[9] After the Second World War, it was briefly used as a material storage facility until it was blown up - so its damage still allowed this type of use.[4] It thus shares the fate of several former churches in Leipzig. It is not known who was the owner of the sacred building at the time the church was blown up.

Present: Forum Thomanum

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In the 2000s, the former church grounds were integrated into the educational campus Forum Thomanum: the primary school forum thomanum was built on the site.[10]

Congregation "Leipzig English Church"

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Only after the peaceful revolution in East Germany was a new congregation of English-speaking Christians founded in 1995 with the help of the British Missionary Society[4] under the name Leipzig English Church (LEC), which belongs to the Church of England and is supported by the Intercontinental Church Society.[11] It is also a member of the Association of Anglican-Episcopal Congregations in Germany, the Association of Christian Churches in Germany and the German Evangelical Alliance.[12]

The parish has been holding its services in the parish hall of St. Andrew's Church again since 2012. Since 2014, a German-language service has been held in addition to the English-language service.[13] The driving force behind this was Revd. Canon Martin Reakes-Williams, who was pastor of this parish until November 2021.[14][15] The Association of Friends of the Anglican Parish in Leipzig e. V. is located at Shakespearestrasse 53, where the parish office is also located.[16]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Christoph Kühn: Bachstraßenviertel und Musikviertel: eine historische und städtebauliche Studie, im Auftrag des Stadtplanungsamtes hrsg. von Pro Leipzig, Leipzig 1999, S. 14.
  2. ^ The student and academic networks of Americans who studied in Leipzig continued to exist even after they left Leipzig. Charles Forster Smith: Reminiscences and Sketches, Nashville 1908.-Anja Becker: "Southern academic ambitions meet German scholarship: the LeipzigNetworks of Vanderbilt University's James H. Kirkland in the late 19th century", in: Journal of Southern History, November 1, 2008. -Anja Becker: For the Sake of Old Leipzig Days....Academic Networks of American Students at the German University, 1781–1914, Diss. Leipzig 2005. -Anja Werner: The Transatlandic World of Higher Education: Americans at German Universities, 1776–1916, Oxford-New York 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e Matthias Gretzschel, Hartmut Mai: Kirchen in Leipzig, Schriften des Leipziger Geschichtsvereins N.F./Bd. 2, Sax-Verlag, Beucha 1993, pp. 32 f.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Cornelia Kästner: Leipzig English Church feiert 10 Jahre Gemeindeleben und 120 Jahre Existenz an der Pleiße, in: Leipziger Volkszeitung vom 17. Oktober 2005, S. 16.
  5. ^ "Anglican Church of Saint Lucas". City of Karlovy Vary. March 2013. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  6. ^ Vera Denzer/Andreas Dix/Haik Thomas Porada (Hrsg.): Leipzig: eine landeskundliche Bestandsaufnahme, Landschaften in Deutschland Bd. 78, Böhlau, Köln 2015, p. 188.
  7. ^ Hartmut Mai unter Beteiligung von Matthias Gretzschel (Bearb.): Anglo-amerikanische Kirche, in: Landesamt für Denkmalpflege Sachsen (Hrsg.): Die Bau- und Kunstdenkmäler von Sachsen, Teil Stadt Leipzig, Deutscher Kunstverlag, München 1995, S. 783–786, Inhalt von Seite 784.
  8. ^ Maggie Humphreys/Robert Evans: Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland, Mansell, London 1997, p. 77.
  9. ^ Christoph Kühn: Bachstraßenviertel und Musikviertel: eine historische und städtebauliche Studie, im Auftrag des Stadtplanungsamtes hrsg. von Pro Leipzig, Leipzig 1999, S. 22.
  10. ^ Grundschule und Hort, abgerufen am 13. März 2023
  11. ^ Who we are, www.leipzig-english-church.de, abgerufen am 14. November 2016.
  12. ^ Leipzig English Church (Anglican), www.kirche-leipzig.de, abgerufen am 14. November 2016.
  13. ^ https://leipzig.english.church/de/ leipzig.english.church, abgerufen am 17. Oktober 2023.
  14. ^ Manfred Stedler (Hrsg.): Von ‘All Saints’ zu ‘Leipzig English Church’: Zwei Jahrhunderte anglikanischer Tradition in Leipzig. Hrsg. im Auftrag des Vereins der Freunde der anglikanischen Gemeinde in Leipzig e. V., Mammendorf 2006 (deutsch/englisch) ISBN 978-3-86611-150-9, S. 9, 18 ff.
  15. ^ Revd. Martin Reakes-Williams verlässt Leipzig
  16. ^ Impressum, www.leipzig-english-church.de, abgerufen am 17. Oktober 2023.
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