St. Michael's Church | |
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48°08′20″N 11°34′14″E / 48.13889°N 11.57056°ECoordinates: 48°08′20″N 11°34′14″E / 48.13889°N 11.57056°E | |
Location | Neuhauser Straße 6 Munich, Bavaria |
Country | Germany |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Website | www |
History | |
Consecrated | 6 July 1597 |
Architecture | |
Status | Parish church |
Functional status | Active |
Style | Renaissance |
Groundbreaking | 18 April 1583 |
Administration | |
Archdiocese | Munich and Freising |
Clergy | |
Rector | P. Karl Kern SJ |
Laity | |
Director of music | Dr. Frank Höndgen |
Organist(s) | Peter Kofler |
St Michael is a Jesuit church in Munich, southern Germany, the largest Renaissance church north of the Alps. The style of the building had an enormous influence on Southern German early Baroque architecture.
In 1556 Albert V, Duke of Bavaria granted the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) permission to establish what is now Wilhelmsgymnasium in Munich, thus establishing the order's presence in the city. The collegiate church was only established during the reign of his son William V, Duke of Bavaria, also known as "the Pious". who was a supporter of the Jesuits' Counter Reformation tenets. The church was finally consecrated in 1597, after fourteen years of construction. When the Jesuits were suppressed and banned from most Catholic territories in Europe, the church came into possession of the Bavarian Royal Family and eventually the State of Bavaria, when Germany became a republic.
The church was built by William V, Duke of Bavaria between 1583 and 1597 as a spiritual center for the Counter Reformation. The foundation stone was laid in 1585.
In order to realise his ambitious plans for the church and the adjoining college, Duke William had 87 houses in the best location pulled down, ignoring the protests of the citizens. The church was erected in two stages. In the first stage (1583-88), the church was built by the model of Il Gesù in Rome and given a barrel-vaulted roof by an unknown architect, the vault being the largest in the world apart from that of St Peter's in Rome, spanning freely more than 20 meters. When the church was built, there were doubts about the stability of the vaulting. But it was the tower that collapsed in 1590, destroying the just completed quire. Duke William V took it as a bad omen and so planned to build a much larger church. The second phase of construction continued until the consecration of the church in 1597.Friedrich Sustris built on to the undamaged nave a new quire and a transept and a magnificent facade. The church is 78.2 meters long, 20.3 meters wide and 28.2 meters high.