Puneet Varma (Editor)

St. Ansgar's Cathedral

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Location
  
Copenhagen

Denomination
  
Roman Catholic

Founded
  
1840 (1840)

Opened
  
1842

Phone
  
+45 33 13 37 62

Country
  
Denmark

Website
  
sanktansgar.dk

Dedication
  
Saint Ansgar

Architectural style
  
Neoclassical architecture

Architect
  
Gustav Friedrich Hetsch

St. Ansgar's Cathedral

Address
  
Bredgade 64, 1260 København K, Denmark

Similar
  
Alexander Nevsky Church, St Andrew's Church, Reformed Church - Copenhagen, St Augustine's Church, St Paul's Church - Copenhagen

Profiles

Saint Ansgar's Cathedral (Danish: Sankt Ansgars Kirke — Katolsk Domkirke) in Copenhagen, Denmark is the principal church of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Copenhagen, which encompasses all of Denmark, including the Faroe Islands and Greenland. It was consecrated in 1842 and became a cathedral in 1941.

History

The first Catholic congregations in Denmark after the Protestant reformation were centered on foreign legations. Starting with the one formed by the Spanish diplomat (and poet) Count Bernardino de Rebolledo, who served in Denmark between 1648 and 1659, continuous church registers were kept. From its original location at de Rebolledo's residence on Østergade the chapel moved around between various legation addresses, but in 1764 it settled at the present location on what is now Bredgade. For some time the Austrian legation had been the main supporter of the congregation, and the new chapel was financed by Empress Maria Theresia.

The present day church was designed by the German-born architect Gustav Friedrich Hetsch. Construction began in 1840 and the church was consecrated on All Saints' Day, 1 November 1842. During 1988–1992 the church underwent extensive restoration in collaboration with the National Museum of Denmark under the direction of the architect Vilhelm Wohlert.

The cathedral possesses the skull of St. Lucius, an early pope, which previously had been in Roskilde Cathedral which was originally dedicated to the saint.

References

St. Ansgar's Cathedral Wikipedia