Construction of the choir 1494 (≈ 1494)
Date worn on the Gothic vault key.
1719
Reconstruction of the nave
Reconstruction of the nave 1719 (≈ 1719)
Date engraved on the baroque gate.
1828
Post-Napoleonian Restoration
Post-Napoleonian Restoration 1828 (≈ 1828)
Date indicated on the portal.
1918
Rediscovered paintings
Rediscovered paintings 1918 (≈ 1918)
Update after the First War.
1940
Roof damage
Roof damage 1940 (≈ 1940)
Damaged during the Second War.
1967
End of restorations
End of restorations 1967 (≈ 1967)
Post-war work completed.
19 janvier 1995
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 19 janvier 1995 (≈ 1995)
Official registration by order.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church (Cd.230): registration by decree of 19 January 1995
Key figures
Laubser - Architect
Author of an expansion project in 1859.
Origin and history
The Church of St.Agathe of Niederentzen, located in the Upper Rhine in the Greater East Region, is a religious building whose origins date back to the 4th quarter of the 15th century. From this medieval period remain the choir, dated 1494 (inscription on the vault key), and the base of the tower. This choir, the only vaulted part of warheads, bears witness to late Gothic architecture in Alsace. The nave, larger than the original, was rebuilt in 1719 (dated engraved on the portal), marking a major transformation in the early eighteenth century. An octagonal belfry was added the same time, completing the silhouette of the building.
In the 19th century, the church experienced several interventions: restorations in 1828, then a project of enlargement in 1859 by architect Laubser, abandoned for lack of funding. The conflicts of the twentieth century also left their mark: after damage to the roof in 1940, restoration work was completed in 1967. Meanwhile, the ceiling paintings, masked, were rediscovered after 1918. Ranked a historic monument in 1995, the church illustrates almost five centuries of architectural and community history.
The building, owned by the commune of Niederentzen, is distinguished by its mixture of styles — late Gothic and Baroque — and its central role in local life. Its listing in the inventory of historic monuments underscores its heritage value, both for its architecture and for the traces of successive periods it bears. Main Street, where it is located, thus concentrates a medieval, modern and contemporary heritage.
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