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Keywords

fabric
Nikolaus Türkow
University of Rostock
Valdemar I
Polabian Slavs
Roztok
Hanseatic League
embroideries
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
Marienkirche
Hanse
Rostock
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
Germany
bagpipe
embroidery
Hochzeitstuch


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Rostock - Marienkirche

Rostock - Marienkirche
With more than 200.000 inhabitants Rostock is the largest city in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.

Small Slavic settlements existed already in the 8th century. A settlement named Roztok was founded in the 11th century by Polabian Slavs. This town was burnt down by troops of the Danish king Valdemar I in 1161. Afterwards, the place was settled by German traders.

After 1226 Rostock became the seat of the Lordship of Rostock.

In the 1250s the city became a member of the Hanseatic League. In the 14th century, it was a powerful seaport town with 12,000 inhabitants and the largest city in Mecklenburg. Ships for cruising the Baltic Sea were constructed in Rostock. Until the last Hansa Convention in 1669, Rostock took a leading role in the Baltic Sea behind Lübeck.
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Marienkirche is a large Brick Gothic church. Built in the 13th century, it was enlarged and modified at the end of the 14th century into the present basilica. The first reference to a church on this site is in 1232, which is thought to be the predecessor of the current building. The triple-nave cross-shaped basilica is in Brick Gothic, a building style typical of the Hanseatic port cities. The huge tower with a baroque lantern at the top was not completed until the end of the 18th century.

In 1419, the University of Rostock was founded, the oldest university in the Baltic Sea area. It was ceremoniously opened in the Marienkirche. The parish priest of the church, Nikolaus Türkow, was personally involved in the founding of the university and the church remained closely associated with it for a long time. Even today, the "professors' pews" indicate that St. Mary's Church had the function of a university and council church until the turn of the century around 1900.

Valuable fabrics were part of the furnishings of large churches in the Middle Ages. Only a few have survived the test of time. A detail from the "Hochzeitstuch" (wedding cloth) embroidered in the first half of the 16th century. It is visible, that the work was not finished. Perhaps the wedding did never take place - maybe a tragic story!

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