Tettens, St.-Martins-Kirche

St.-Martins-Kirche, Glockengasse, 26434 Tettens, Germany 🇩🇪
Builder A. Führer
Year 1970
Period/Style Neo-Baroque
Stops 24
Keyboards 2+P
Keyaction tracker/mechanical

The St. Martin Church in Tettens, built between 1143 and 1210, is a late Romanesque hall church featuring an eastern apse. Notable interior elements include a monumental late Gothic altarpiece and a sacrament house from 1525. The church's organ history dates back to 1575 when it received a gift of an organ from Maria of Jever. In 1744, Eilert Köhler built a new two-manual organ with 24 stops and a pedal, replacing the earlier instrument. Köhler's original organ case and some of the pipes remain intact today.

In 1970, Alfred Führer constructed a new organ within Köhler's historic case, retaining the original façade pipes. This new instrument also saw later improvements, including the addition of a Gedackt 8' stop to the pedal in 2002, which had remained vacant since Führer's rebuild. The organ maintains its historical significance, blending the original 18th-century craftsmanship with modern updates to enhance its functionality.

Hauptwerk Brustwerk Pedal
Quintade 16' Gedackt 8' Subbass 16'
Principal 8' Blockflöte 4' Principal 8'
Rohrflöte 8' Principal 2' Gedackt 8'
Oktave 4' Quinte 1 1/3' Oktave 4'
Gedacktflöte 4' Terzian 2f Bauernflöte 2'
Quinte 2 2/3' Scharf 3f 2/3' Rauschpfeife 4f 2 2/3'
Oktave 2' Dulzian 8' Trompete 8'
Mixtur 4-6f 1 1/3'
Zimbel 3f
Trompete 8'
Additionals: BW/HW, HW/Ped, BW/Ped, Tremulant

No Video/Audio samples available.

https://nomine.net/orgel/tettens-st-martin/

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