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Church of Saint Didier de Gros-Rederching en Moselle

Moselle

Church of Saint Didier de Gros-Rederching

    19 Rue de l'Église
    57410 Gros-Réderching

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1715-1720
Erection of Guiderkirch in parish
1751
Reconstruction of the church
1754-1758
Achievements of altars
1776
Order of the Holy altar Agathe
1802
Change of mind
Fin XIXe - début XXe siècle
Adding Baldaquin
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Jean Martersteck - Suspected Sculptor Probable author of altars (1754-1758).
Dominique Labroise - Sculptor confirmed Realized the Holy altar Agathe in 1776.

Origin and history

The church of Saint-Didier de Gros-Rederching, located in the Moselle department, is a religious building rebuilt in 1751. It replaces an older church and becomes the spiritual heart of the commune, with Guiderkirch as a branch, erected in a parish between 1715 and 1720. Originally attached to the Hornbach Archpriest, it fell under Rohrbach's in 1802, reflecting post-revolutionary ecclesiastical reorganizations.

The reconstruction of 1751 was accompanied by a complete renewal of the furniture and statues. The high altar and the left side altar, dedicated to the Virgin, were made between 1754 and 1758, probably by sculptor Jean Martersteck. These rock-style elements incorporate patterns such as the ark of alliance and falls of flowers, characteristic of Lorrain Baroque art. An altar dedicated to Saint Agathe, commissioned in 1776 by the sculptor Dominique Labroise, completes the ensemble.

The statues of Saint Laurent and Saint Didier, patron saint of the parish, date from the same period as the altars but seem attributable to another artist. Their distinctive style—faces with prominent chins, fleshy lips and hair in separate strands—exposed to the figures of the Evangelists of the ancient pulpit. A Virgin with the Child, rigid and standing on a globe, occupies the niche of the left altar. These works illustrate local religious art, marked by regional influences and traditional iconography.

The church underwent subsequent changes, such as the addition of a late baldachin (late 19th or early 20th century) covering the high altar. The latter, initially surmounted by a dais adorned with garlands, lost this element during the Second World War, altering its original proportions. The statue of Saint Agathe, carved in linden, is particularly damaged due to the fragility of the material.

The building is part of the religious landscape of the country of Bitche, marked by a strong Catholic identity and cross-border artistic exchanges. The altars and statues, although partially altered, testify to the vitality of religious control in the eighteenth century in Lorraine, mixing local know-how and broader stylistic influences.

External links