St John's Church, Wissembourg

St. John’s Church, Wissembourg, seen through the gardens

St. John's Church (French Église Saint-Jean-l'Évangéliste, German Johanneskirche) is a Historical Monument in the city of Wissembourg in northeastern France.

History

St. John's was built between the 12th and 16th centuries, though there must have been churches preceding it. At first it was a parish church of Wissembourg, under the patronage of the abbot of Weissenburg Abbey. But this changed when Henri Motherer, a Reformation-minded parish priest managed to buy its independence about 1520. Motherer, by then openly adhering to the Reformation, called on Martin Bucer, whom he considered better qualified, to preach the Reformation.[1] After a tug of war between Catholics and Lutherans in the first decades of the 16th century, St. John's became a Protestant church, and remained so for over a century. But in 1684—a year before the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes—it was forced to become a simultaneum, serving both Protestants and Catholics. It remained a simultaneum until Napoleon returned it to the Protestants, ever since when it has remained a Protestant church. It was classified as a Historical Monument on December 6, 1898.[2] It was heavily damaged during World War II, but it has been restored.

The Building

The oldest part of the building is the Romanesque tower. (A lintel of an earlier, pre-Romanesque church incorporated in it may date from the 8th century.) The tower dates from the early 13th century.

The choir, in part likewise from the 13th century, is a mixture of Romanesque and Gothic elements, and features two side chapels. To the left of the choir is the vestry, above which there is a room that must once have served as a chapel.

The 14th-century nave is now quite low, as it is covered by a modern ceiling inspired by that of the vestry.

The chapel to the south of the nave dates from the 15th and 16th centuries. Its two bays have Gothic vaults. The vaults of the northern aisle, which an inscription dates 1513, are flamboyant Gothic.

The Organ

Earlier Instruments

Andreas Silbermann built a fairly small organ for Saint-John's between 1717 and 1720. It was altered a number of times, not always felicitously, and was badly damaged during World War II. In 1961 it was replaced by an electro-pneumatic traction organ built by Ernest Mühleisen of the Manufacture d’Orgues Muhleisen. But the neo-classical style of this organ soon went out of fashion, and in spite of a thorough revision by the builders in 1988, it did not age well. In 2005[3] it was decided to replace it.

The Thomas Organ

The project was undertaken, not just by the parish and the Union of Protestant Churches of Alsace and Lorraine (UEPAL), but also by the City of Wissembourg, the French state, the Direction régionale des affaires culturelles of Alsace and a group of organ buffs calling themselves "Association des Amis de l'Orgue de St Jean". The parish and the UEPAL required an instrument that would be suitable for the Lutheran liturgy of St John’s. But it was also agreed that the organ should have a role in the musical life of Wissembourg, and so it was desirable, for variety’s sake, that the organ should be quite distinct from two recently restored instruments, the 1766 Dubois organ in St. Peter and St. Paul's Church in Wissembourg itself and the 1913 Walcker organ in the protestant church of nearby Soultz-sous-Forêts. Hence a call for bids was issued for a baroque instrument modeled on North-German organs.

Five bids were considered, but the contract was awarded to the Manufacture d'Orgues Thomas of Sert-Francorchamps. The Thomas organ is faithful to the North German baroque tradition in its mechanical traction, in what stops it has and in the materials of its pipes. But it has a number of modern features. The most noticeable of these is the decidedly contemporary look of its organ case, asymmetrical and decorated with horizontal resin strips whose LEDs can emit light of different colors. Of greater importance for the organist is that the range of its three manuals (C–G''') and its pedal (C-F') is wider than the organ’s models, that its tuning is modern (A = 440 Hz) so that the organ can easily be used in ensembles, and that its stops and their combinations are selected electronically.

The disposition of the Thomas organ is as follows:

Rückpositiv Hauptwerk Oberwerk Pedal
Principal 8 Quintadena 16 Gedackt 8 Principal 16
Gedackt 8 Principal 8 Spillpfeife 8 Subbass 16
Quintadena 8 Rohrflöte 8 Viola di gamba 8 Octav 8
Octav 4 Octav 4 Flöte 4 Octav 4
Rohrflöte 4 Spitzflöte 4 Nasat 2 2/3 Mixture II
Octav 2 Quint 2 2/3 Flöte 2 Mixture IV
Waldflöte 2 Superoctav 2 Quint 1 1/3 Posaune 16
Sesquialtera II Mixture IV Trompet 8 Trompet 8
Scharff IV Trompet 16 Vox humana 8
Fagott 16 Schalmey 4
Dulcian 8

There was a two-part celebration of the inauguration on June 28, 2015, a dedication service in the morning[4] and concert in the afternoon, by Bart Jacobs, the organist of the Brussels Cathedral of St. Michael and St. Gudula.[5]

Other Church Furniture

The baptismal font dates from the 17th century, but its basin proper is older and may go back to an earlier church. The pulpit, likewise 17th-century, is Renaissance in style.

Art Works

The south chapel is decorated with a medallion of Martin Bucer and the northern side isle features a 19th-century bust of Martin Luther.

The large mural

The church has several mural paintings from the 14th century, which were restored in 1990. Most of them are in the former chapel above the vestry, but a mural in the vestry itself shows Christ crucified, with two angels that capture his blood. In the chapel, two murals represent Saint Erasmus of Formia, one as he is teaching, and another while he is being tortured. The largest mural is a rectangle divided in six horizontal bands, which depict (from top to bottom)

In much better shape than the lowest two bands of this mural are those of Saint Catherine of Alexandria and of a virgin (or the Virgin) with a unicorn.

Sources

Unless otherwise indicated by the notes, the information in this article is based on this page of the website of Saint John’s parish (like all websites in this article, consulted in October 016), and on the following sources about the organ:

Notes

  1. Jean-Frédéric Jung 1841 Histoire de la Réformation à Wissembourg, précédée d'une notice historique sur cette ville jusqu'au seizième siècle Strasbourg: G.L. Schuler, pp. 24–27; also available here.
  2. See this page of a website of the French Ministry of Culture.
  3. This date of the start of the planning of its replacement from Église Saint-Jean-l'Évangéliste de Wissembourg.
  4. Dernières Nouvelles d’Alsace (ed. Wissembourg) June 28, 2015; also available here.
  5. Dernières Nouvelles d’Alsace (ed. Wissembourg) July 1, 2015; also available here.

Coordinates: 49°02′19″N 7°56′34″E / 49.0386°N 7.9429°E / 49.0386; 7.9429

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