Gustav-Adolf-Stabkirche - wooden church in Hahnenklee
- Written by Portal Editor
Another interesting encounter along the way on the way to Goslar: The wooden stave church in Hahnenklee was built entirely without screws and nails. We were on our way from the Prahljust campsite near Clausthal-Zellerfeld when the cycle route led us to the edge of Hahnenklee-Bockswiese, where we came across the stave church.
The highly interesting wooden building made us investigate immediately and we found out that until the beginning of the 20th century the top floor of the former school building near today's Hindenburgplatz served as a place of worship.
Professor Mohrmann designs the stave church
For this reason, the consistory architect Karl Mohrmann from Hanover was commissioned to design an independent church building for Hahnenklee. During a study trip to Norway, Prof. Mohrmann saw the stave churches there and drew some of them. He then suggested building a stave church in Hahnenklee, and justified this, among other things, by the fact that at the time of the Christianization of Germany there were stave churches throughout northern Germany and this architectural style was therefore also native here.
Free replica of the Borgund stave church
Outdoor pagan symbols
Since the "real" stave churches arose in the period of Christianization, they still contain many pagan symbols such as dragon heads or snake symbols. These can also be found in abundance in Hahnenklee.
Many parallels with shipbuilding are also very striking: Since the first stave churches were built by the Vikings, they took over many elements of shipbuilding. The chandelier in Hahnenklee, for example, is modelled on a ship's steering wheel, and the upper windows resemble portholes.
The location of the church was a compromise between the two districts of Hahnenklee and Bockswiese: the church was placed on the outskirts of Hahnenklee, which was closest to Bockswiese. In the 1950s, the school was built 200 meters to the south in a similarly "central" location. According to a survey by NDR, it ranks 29th among the 100 most important buildings in northern Germany.
Karl Mohrmann memorial plaque in the Gustav Adolf stave church
From 1898, Karl Mohrmann worked as a part-time consistorial master builder for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Hanover, building or restoring churches, vicarages and private houses. In 1909 he received the title of secret building officer. From 1911 to 1913 he was rector of the Technical University. Mohrmann travelled to Italy, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Great Britain, Africa and America, among other places.
Mohrmann was also heavily involved in society. For example, in 1901 he was a co-founder and from 1912 to 1914 chairman of the Lower Saxony Heimatbund, was chairman of the Bauhütte zum Weißen Blatt founded by Hase, was on the board of the Hanover Art Association and chairman of the heraldic association “Zum Kleeblatt”, founded in 1888, supporting association of the Lower Saxony coat of arms.
Buildings
- Evangelical Lutheran Martin Luther Church in Bremen-Blumenthal (1901–1902)
- Evangelical Lutheran St. Ansgari Church in Oldenburg-Eversten (1902)
- Bethlehem Church in Hanover-Linden-Nord (1902–04)
- Evangelical Lutheran John's Church in Hanover-Misburg (1902-1904)
- Evangelical Lutheran Jerusalem Church in Wendeburg-Rüper, district of Peine (1906–1907)
- Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. Michael with vicarage in Bremen-Grohn (1906–1908)
- Gustav Adolf stave church in Hahnenklee (1907–08)
- Evangelical Lutheran St. Briccius Church in Lahstedt-Adenstedt (1922)
Please read as well:
Market Church of the Holy Spirit in Clausthal-Zellerfeld
St. Sophia Church (Crkva Sveta Sofija) in the center of Ohrid