St. John's Church, Tartu Explained

St John's Church, Tartu
Fullname:Parish Church of Saint John the Baptist, Tartu
Native Name:Estonian: Tartu Jaani kirik
Location:Tartu
Country: Estonia
Address:Jaani 5
Denomination:Lutheran
Previous Denomination:Catholic
Founded Date:12th century
Dedication:John the Baptist
Status:Active
Functional Status:Parish church
Heritage Designation:Kultuurimälestis (no. 6916)
Designated Date:16 September 1997
Architectural Type:Basilica
Style:Gothic
Years Built:14th century
Groundbreaking:12th century
Tower Quantity:1
Tower Height:63m (207feet)
Materials:Brick
Terracotta (façade)
Bells:3
Parish:St John's in Tartu
Deanery:Tartu
Diocese:Southern Region
Bishop:Joel Luhamets
Rector:Triin Käpp
Naatan Haamer
Language(S):Estonian

St. John's Church, Tartu (Estonian: Jaani kirik, German: St. Johanniskirche zu Dorpat[1]) is a Brick Gothic Lutheran church, one of the landmarks of the city of Tartu, Estonia. It is dedicated to John the Baptist.

History

Initially, St John's was a Catholic church, as the oldest parts of the current building originate from the 14th century. Before that, there has been a church building on the same place at least since the first half of the 13th century. Archaeological investigations have indicated that there may well have been a wooden church here in the 12th century. This is particularly remarkable because the national Christianisation did not take place until much later.[2] The red brick building has seen extensive changes, as it was largely rebuilt after both the Great Northern War and World War II. Baroque chapels were added in 1746 and 1769. The church is now part of the Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church.[3]

The Great Fire of Tartu started near the church in 1775 and the church and nearby Uppsala House were spared the destruction which destroyed nearly two hundred houses.[4]

At the end of the 19th century the church supplied primary education. The actress Amalie Konsa received her only schooling here.[5]

Description

The most outstanding feature of St. John's is its wealth of terracotta figurines surrounding the church's exterior. Originally, there were more than a thousand hand-made figurines, each different from the others; now, about 200 have survived. The large number of individual figurines has given birth to the hypotheses that they might have been modelled after citizens of Tartu; on the other hand, some of them wear crowns, which hints they might depict someone else.

Since 1999, St John's Church has two new bells named Peetrus and Paulus after city's two patron saints (respectively, St. Peter and St. Paul).

Church's congregation

The church is used by Tartu University-St. John's Congregation (Estonian: link=no|Tartu Ülikooli-Jaani kogudus). Before 2001, Tartu University Congregation and Tartu St. John's Congregation were standalone congregations.[6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Die St. Johanniskirche zu Dorpat: ein interessantes Denkmal mittelalterlicher Baukunst. Johannes Frey. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. 1902. de.
  2. https://www.tartu.ee/?lang_id=2&page_id=2110 Tartu Jaani
  3. http://www.visitestonia.com/en/tartu-jaani-st-johns-church-of-the-estonian-evangelical-lutheran-church St Johns Church
  4. Book: Metz, M. Pile Foundations Baltic Piling Days 2012.. 2013. CRC Pr I Llc. 0415643341. 38. etal.
  5. Web site: Konsa, Amalie - Eesti Entsüklopeedia. etbl.teatriliit.ee. 2020-01-30.
  6. Web site: Koguduse ajalugu – Tartu Jaani kirik . jaanikirik.ee . 1 March 2024 . et.