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Leipzig-Zentrum

infinite staircase
infinite staircase
by Hilde Jüngst

Municipality Leipzig

Windows and lines
Windows and lines
by Hilde Jüngst

Specks Hof Leipzig

Nikolaikirche Leipzig
Nikolaikirche Leipzig
by Hilde Jüngst

The St. Nicholas Church (in German: Nikolaikirche) has long been one of the most famous in Leipzig, and rose to national fame in 1989 with the Monday Demonstrations when it became the centre of peaceful revolt against communist rule The church was built in about 1165 around the same time Leipzig was founded. It is named after St. Nicholas, the patron saint of merchants and wholesalers, and is situated in the very heart of the city at the intersection of two then important trade roads, the Via Regia and Via Imperii. It is built partially in the Romanesque style but was extended and enlarged in the early 16th century with a more Gothic style. In 1794 the interior was remodeled by German architect Johann Carl Friedrich Dauthe in the neoclassical style. The church has been a Protestant seat since 1539 after the Protestant Reformation, but the Catholic Church is allowed to use it too.

Thanks to all Phoide contributors to Leipzig-Zentrum!
Most notably Hilde Jüngst.