Hofkirche St. Leodegar

From Wiki:

The Church of St. Leodegar (German: St. Leodegar im Hof or Hofkirche St. Leodegar) is the most important church and a landmark in the city of Lucerne, Switzerland. It was built in parts from 1633 to 1639 on the foundation of the Roman basilica which had burnt in 1633. This church was one of the few built north of the Alps during the Thirty Years War and one of the largest and art history rich churches of the German late renaissance period.

In 1874 the parish church of St. Leodegar was founded and with that the church became simultaneously a monastery church and parish church, as it is today.

6 Comments CherryPie on Aug 19th 2013

The timeless in you is aware of life’s timelessness. And knows that yesterday is but today’s memory and tomorrow is today’s dream.

Kahlil Gibran

Memories and Dreams

24 Comments CherryPie on Aug 18th 2013

P1040812

P1040813

The Bronze Nymphs dotted around Chirk Castle are the work of Andrea Carlo Lucchesi.

4 Comments CherryPie on Aug 18th 2013

Filed under Art, Out & About

Hercules

P1040819

And… There’s always one!!!


P1040818

10 Comments CherryPie on Aug 17th 2013

P1040822_edited-1

Detail from the Statue of Hercules at Chirk Castle:

This lead statue of Hercules was commissioned in the 1720’s by Robert Myddelton, and stood outside the main entrance to the Castle with a companion figure of Mars. In June 1770 it was removed to an outlying wood in the park, whence it was rescued in 1983 by means of an R.A.F. helicopter. The severely damaged statue, has been restored by the National Trust. Inscribed in Latin on the plinth is a heroic couplet recording the statue’s flight and eventual repose.

You can see him in his full glory in a previous post of mine.

20 Comments CherryPie on Aug 16th 2013

Bridge from a Bridge

The Chapel Bridge and Water Tower were built in the 14th century.  The bridge served as a rampart, as well as part of the towns fortification.  Originally 285 meters long, the bridge was shortened several times during the 19th century.  Water tower served as a dungeon, archive and treasury vault.

In the 17th century the Chapel Bridge was adorned with a set of paintings.  The triangular panels were designed by town secretary Renward Cysat, a universal scholar, and painted in Renaissance style by Hans Heinrich Wagmann. The series of paintings depict the development of the city and republic of Lucerne from a Counter-Reformation point of view.  Other pictures portray the life and sufferings of the town’s two patron saints, St. Leodegar and St. Mauritius.

During the night of 17th August 1993, a fire broke out on the Chapel Bridge burning 81 of the 111 bridge paintings.  The paintings of both bridge-heads escaped damage by the blaze.

Between 1994 and 2001 photographic facsimiles were displayed to fill the enormous gap.

In  2002 Lucerne’s city council together with the federal and cantonal offices for the preservation of historical monuments, agreed upon which the order of the paintings would be newly hung.

The paintings on the bridgeheads are the originals.  In the middle of the bridge the paintings from the St. Mauritius series can be seen.  These had been removed in the 19th century when the bridge was shortened during the construction of the quays on the north and south ends.

The gap remaining between the paintings serves as a reminder of the irreparable loss to the bridge – and for the city of Lucerne – caused by the blaze on the night of 17th August 1993.*

The Tower and the Mountain

Beneath the Bridge

Sunset Over the Mountain

*Information from a sign board located next to the bridge.

PS: I don’t have photos of the paintings on this bridge, but I do have photographs of paintings from a similar bridge.  Coming soon… ;-)

8 Comments CherryPie on Aug 15th 2013

Chapel Bridge

I was greeted with this delightful view whilst walking to dinner on my first evening in Lucerne.

The view was a treat from Mr C who did his usual reconnaissance exercise to find the best places to dine. During his explorations he found the perfect walking route to surprise me with this view.  Whilst he was scouting the area I was having a nice relaxing bath to recover from our earlier flight hassles ;-)

12 Comments CherryPie on Aug 15th 2013

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »