Matthias Dropa Explained

Matthias Dropa
Birth Date:17th century
Birth Place:Transylvania
Death Place:Lüneburg
Education:pupil of Arp Schnitger
Occupation:Organ builder

Matthias Dropa (born between 1646 and 1665[1] – 25 September 1732) was a German organ builder. A pupil of Arp Schnitger, he built organs in Northern Germany, including St. Michaelis, Lüneburg.

Career

Born in Transylvania, Dropa worked as an assistant of Arp Schnitger, probably between 1680 and 1692.[2] He founded his own workshop in 1692 and achieved the citizenship of Hamburg on 18 November 1692. He built in 1696 three new organs in Bargteheide and Finkenwerder. From 1698 to 1700, he expanded the organ Cuxhaven-Altenbruch. He moved to Lüneburg in 1705, where he built a new organ at St. Michaelis, together with his assistant . From 1712 to 1715, he expanded the organ of St. Johannis, supervised by Georg Böhm by a pedal. Dropa was the teacher of, whom he trained from 1707 to 1715. The organ builder married his daughter Catharina Margaretha on 22 June 1734. Dropa died in Lüneburg.

Works

Year Location Church class=unsortable Image !Manuals Stops Notes
1696Hamburg-Finkenwerdernot extant
1696BargteheideProtestant churchonly prospect extant
1698–1700Cuxhaven-AltenbruchII/P28renovation, five stops
1705–1708LüneburgSt. MichaelisIII/P43new, prospect and five stops extant
1708LüneburgSt. LambertiI61801 to Camin, 1855 to church in Dreilützow
1712–1715LüneburgSt. JohannisIII/P46expansion

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. [Stef Tuinstra]
  2. Kathrin Heitmüller: Der Orgelbauer Matthias Dropa im soziokulturellen Umfeld seiner Zeit, p. 4, retrieved 1 January 2013.