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i think you have in fact mixed up the thomaskirche and the nikolaikirche :)
Hmmmm... well now you've got me curious. Let's see, here's the church in that picture that I just reblogged:
And here's a photo of the Thomaskirche from the internet:
Meanwhile, here's the Nikolaikirche, also in Leipzig:
They do share some visual characteristics, but I'm pretty sure I'm correct in identifying the church in OOP's picture as the Thomaskirche!
Any other Leipzigers around who could confirm for us?
Counterpoint, a collection
Bach's Fugue 4 in C# minor from Well-Tempered Clavier I, autograph
Gaudy Night, by Dorothy L. Sayers
Bach's Fugue 4 in C# minor from WTC I, performed by Kimiko Ishizaka
Pale Fire, by Vladimir Nabokov
Uncredited illustration from The New Yorker, March 6, 2023
An Essay on Man, Alexander Pope
Thomaskirche, Leipzig, postcard
Original Print: That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire (Gerard Manley Hopkins), from The Wytham Studio
An Easter Meeting in Leipzig with JS Bach - 300 years on.
Even people who don’t think they like classical music know and even like at least some of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach (1685 – 1750). Those who love classical music are mostly in consensus that he was probably the greatest of all the classical composers. I certainly feel that he stands tall not just in the world of music, but in the world of human creativity too. I believe that we are all a…
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St. Thomas Church (German: Thomaskirche) is a Lutheran church in Leipzig, Germany. It is most famous as the place where Johann Sebastian Bach worked as a Kapellmeister (music director) from 1723 until his death in 1750, and as the location of his remains.
Since 1950, the remains of Johann Sebastian Bach are buried in the Thomaskirche. After his death on July 28, 1750, Bach was laid to rest in the hospital cemetery of the Johanniskirche in Leipzig. With the start of the Bach renaissance in the 19th century, the public started to become interested in his remains and their whereabouts. So, in 1894, the anatomy professor Wilhelm His was commissioned to identify the composer’s remains amongst disinterred bones from the cemetery where Bach had been buried. He arrived at the conclusion that “the assumption that the bones of an elderly man, which had been found in an oak coffin near the Johanneskirche, were the remains of Johann Sebastian Bach” (translated from German) was very likely. On July 16, 1900 the bones were placed into a stone sarcophagus underneath the Johanniskirche.
Following the bombardment of the Johanniskirche on December 4, 1943, the bones were transferred to the Thomaskirche. The new grave was inaugurated on July 28, 1950, 200 years after the death of the composer, who is now buried in the sanctuary of the church.
Thomas Church by AndreasKser
DAY 1 | VISITING THOMASKKIRCHE | LEIPZIG | 08/11/17