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The First and the Second Organ of Today's Đakovo Cathedral

Dragan Damjanović orcid id orcid.org/0000-0003-2589-8075 ; Odsjek za povijest umjetnosti Filozofskog fakulteta Sveučilišta u Zagrebu, Zagreb, Hrvatska


Puni tekst: hrvatski pdf 1.211 Kb

str. 233-258

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Sažetak

The organ of Ðakovo Cathedral is one of ten of the biggest organs in Croatian churches. The first organ was built between 1879 and 1882 in Bavaria at the Steinmayer firm in the town of Oettingen. Following the designs of the architect Friedrich von Schmidt that were developed by his student Herman Bollé, the organ housing was built by the Viennese carpenter Ignaz Karger. For that time, this was an extremely large and high-quality instrument that was awarded the Gold Medal at the Bavarian State Exhibition in N.rnberg in 1882. The solutions applied by the above-mentioned architects in designing the organ, marked by mixing of elements of the Romanesque and Gothic styles, were adapted to the layout of the entire interior of Ðakovo Cathedral. The organ is similar to many other organs designed by Schmidt at that time for other Austrian churches (Viennese churches in the districts of Brigittenau and Fünfhaus, Franciscan churches in Innsbruck etc.). This first organ was destroyed in the Great Fire of 1933. Under supervision of the then-leading experts in organbuilding in the country, Franjo Dugan Sr and Franc Kimovec, the new one was built by the firm of Franc Jenko from Št. Vid close to Ljubljana. The instrument itself became much larger, but the appearance of the housing was mostly based on the previous solution in the Schmidt-Bollé project. That solution was to a lesser degree Romanized by the elimination of certain Gothic elements in order to adjust to the fullest extent the instrument's style to that of Ðakovo Cathedral's interior.

Ključne riječi

Hrčak ID:

18338

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/18338

Datum izdavanja:

17.12.2007.

Podaci na drugim jezicima: hrvatski

Posjeta: 4.405 *