Hinrich Brunsberg Explained

Hinrich Brunsberg, also Heinrich Brunsberg or Henryk Brunsberg, (1350 in State of the Teutonic Order – between 1428 and 1435[1] presumably in Szczecin) was a German architect who shaped the medieval Brick Gothic style in eastern northern Germany. He worked around 1400, especially in the Margraviate of Brandenburg and in the Duchy of Pomerania.

Life

Brunsberg was born around 1350 in the Baltic region. It is assumed that he came from the town of Braniewo. In 1372, he acquired citizenship in Gdansk, where there is evidence of land ownership in his name in 1378. Around 1400, he was mentioned for the first time in the liber qurelarum of the city of Szczecin. With the year 1401, an inscription on the north chapel of St. Catherine's Church in the names him as the master builder of the church building. The last mention in the ecclesiastical abandonment books of Stettin dates from 1428. Presumably he died there soon afterwards, but at the latest in 1435 after the completion of the Marienkapelle at St. Catherine's Church in Brandenburg.

Buildings

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Säume: Hinrich Brunsberg, ein spätgotischer Baumeister.