Saint-Pierre-le-Jeune Protestant Church

View of the steeple from the north
Main portal
View of the choir screen and the organ

The Saint-Pierre-le-Jeune Protestant Church (Église protestante Saint-Pierre-le-Jeune) [1] is one of the most important church buildings of the city of Strasbourg, France, from the art historical and architectural viewpoints. It got its name, "Young St. Peter's", because of the existence of three other St. Peter's churches in the same city: Saint-Pierre-le-Vieux ("Old St. Peter's"), divided into a Catholic and a Lutheran church, and Saint-Pierre-le-Jeune catholique, a massive neo-Romanesque domed church from the late 19th century.

The church has been Lutheran since 1524 and its congregation forms part of the Protestant Church of Augsburg Confession of Alsace and Lorraine. It is located on the Route Romane d'Alsace.

Architecture and furnishings

An organ built in 1762 by Johann Andreas Silbermann in the Catholic part of the two-part church of that time was transferred in 1865 to the St. Moriz Church of the parish of Soultz-les-Bains. There, it has been restored to its 1848 condition, a compromise between the original baroque Silbermann settings and the later Romantic tone and harmonic extensions, by the family of Alfred Kern & fils between 2006 and 2008.

References

  1. View of church
  2. View of 14th-century arcade
  3. View of nave
  4. View of frescoes
  5. View of baptismal font
  6. View of the high altar
  7. View of polychrome painting in cloisters
  8. View of glass windows
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Coordinates: 48°35′08″N 7°44′47″E / 48.58556°N 7.74639°E / 48.58556; 7.74639

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