Parish church of St. Gallus and Ulrich, Kißlegg

Coordinates: 47°47′15″N 9°52′49″E / 47.7875°N 9.8804°E / 47.7875; 9.8804
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Interior of the parish church of St. Gallus and Ulrich in Kißlegg

The Parish Church of St Gallus and Ulrich is a Roman Catholic church in Kißlegg, Germany. It was built in 1734-1738 by Johann Georg Fischer through the conversion of a Gothic church predecessor.[citation needed] The tower, which survives from the original construction, is from the twelfth or thirteenth century.[1] It was extensively renovated between 1974 and 1980. The church contains a Madonna of 1623 (attributed to Hans Zürn the Elder), a baroque pulpit of divination Johann Wilhelm (1745) and numerous tombs of the 16th and 17th century. The church also has a valuable treasure of silver (1741-1755) from the workshop of the Augsburg silversmith Franz Christoph Mäderl.[citation needed]

The sarcophagus of "Saint Clemens"

The church also contains a purported relic of Saint Clemens that is in fact an example of a so-called catacomb saint, a corpse that has been taken from the Roman Catacombs, decorated, given a fictitious name, and presented as the relic of a Roman Catholic saint.[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hitchcock, Henry-Russell (1968). Rococo Architecture in Southern Germany. Phaidon. p. 112. ISBN 978-0-7148-1339-4.

47°47′15″N 9°52′49″E / 47.7875°N 9.8804°E / 47.7875; 9.8804