3416 x 5125 px | 28,9 x 43,4 cm | 11,4 x 17,1 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
26 mars 2010
Lieu:
Mala Strana, Prague, Czech Republic
Informations supplémentaires:
The 18th century St. Nicholas Church at Lesser Town Square is Prague's most important high baroque church. The church was designed by Christoph Dientzenhofer, a master builder from Bavaria. He worked on the church from 1704 until 1711. By that time the facade and the nave had been completed. Christof's son, Kilian Ignaz Dientzenhofer, who had attended the Jesuit Clementinum in Prague, succeeded his father as master builder. After building the St. Nicholas Church at the Old Town Square, he continued construction on the St. Nicholas Church in Lesser Town and completed the choir and dome between 1737 and 1752. Neither father nor son would see the building completed, as they both died before the church was completed. Italian master builder Anselmo Lurago, a student of Kilian Ignaz Dientzenhofer, succeeded the Dientzenhofers as master builder of the church and supervised the completion of the church. Lurago is also responsible for the clock tower, built between 1751 and 1755. The interior of the St. Nicholas Church is ornate, with many frescoes and sculptures created by the best artists of the time. Dome The 70m (230 ft) high dome is decorated with the fresco 'The Holy Trinity' by Franz Palko. The four colossal statues below the dome were sculpted by Ignác Franz Platzer, better known for his statues of fighting giants at the entrance of the Prague Castle. The church's baroque organ, built by Tomáš Schwartz and installed here in 1746, was played by Mozart in 1787. Above the organ is a fresco of Saint Cecilia, patroness of music. The eye-catching pulpit at the center of the church is sumptuously decorated with gilded cherubs. It was built in 1765 by Richard and Peter Prachner.