Pedersöre Church
History
The first church stood on the site was probably a small chapel built in stone or wood. The oldest parts of the present church originate from the 1400s. The original medieval stone church had the shape of a rectangular nave with the altar in the east and a tower in the west.
In 1787 work began on the renovation to become an equal-arm cross-church. The work would be performed by the 33-year-old Jacob Rijfs after drawings approved by King Gustav III. The drawings were followed, but not exactly down to the word, thus, the 65m high spire was preserved. The model for this steeple is believed to have been the Storkyrkan tower in Stockholm from the 1490s. In July 1985, the spire was destroyed in a fire that also destroyed the former altarpiece and organ.
After the fire, the church was completely renovated after the architect Erik Crow's drawings and was restored in 1986. A new 39-note organ was installed in 1988. It was made by the Danish organ building company Marcussen & Søn, and became the fifth church organ.
The Bell Tower
The bell tower is built with a ground floor made of stone in a typical Ostrobothnian style. The upper part is built of wood. The bell tower was built under the supervision of Thomas Rijf and Matt Honga during the years of 1769-1775.
One of the belfry's bells are from 1488 and was probably manufactured in Tallinn. In 1615, Jacob De la Gardie bought the clock from its original place in Turku Cathedral and donated it to the church of Pedersöre.
Gallery
-
The Poor Man Statue outside of Pedersöre Church
-
Pedersöre Church in Jakobstad, Finland
-
The bell tower at the church
-
A partial view of the front of the church
-
From the work "Finland in words and pictures" of O.M. Reuter, printed in Stockholm 1901, page 844
-
A picture of Pedersöre Church taken before 1965
-
Military cemetery at Pedersöre church in Jakobstad, Finland
References
- ^ Hiekkanen, Markus (2007). Finnish stone churches of the Middle Ages. The Finnish Literature Society. p. 520. ISBN 978-951-746-861-9.
- ^ Häggblom, Hans (February 9, 2007). "kyrkan". www.pedersoreprosteri.fi/. Archived from the original on May 28, 2016. Retrieved August 4, 2014.
- ^ "Pedersöre kyrka och Kyrkostrand". Museiverket. December 22, 2009. Retrieved December 3, 2016.
External links
Media related to Pedersöre Church at Wikimedia Commons