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Wyświetlanie 1-6 z 6
Tytuł:
Architektura kościoła i kolegium jezuitów w Witebsku
The Architecture of the Jesuit Church and College in Witebsk
Autorzy:
Boberski, Wojciech
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1954596.pdf
Data publikacji:
2002
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
In the lands of White Ruthenia, beyond the rivers Dźwina and Berezyna, Jesuit colleges marked the routes of the victorious campaigns against Moscow; in their course the areas lost by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 16th century were regained. The invincible commander and clever diplomat, the Smolensk voivode, Alexander Korwin Gosiewski was the founder of the college in Witebsk (1637). A perspective plan of Witebsk made in 1664, when the town was occupied by Moscow troops, shows the order’s first wooden buildings with the one-spire St Joseph church (built in 1643-1644). After the return of the monks new wooden buildings were raised (the chemist’s, school, boarding house). The Witebsk chamberlain Adam Franciszek Kisiel turned the church into a family mausoleum and an animated centre of the cult of Blessed Jozafat Kuncewicz, the Uniate archbishop murdered in Witebsk in 1623. All the wooden buildings were burnt by Russian troops in 1708. In 1691 foundations were built for two wings of a stone college. The eastern one, with a vast refectory, was completed (1713-1714) by an architect brought from the Inflants. The northern one, along the River Witba, was built in the years 1737-1759. In 1713 approval was received from Rome for delineation of the church. Architects brought from Vilnius managed its construction (1714-1731). In decorating the interior the painter Jakub Bretzer SJ took part. It was furnished with 11 wooden altars. The church, whose main founder was the Witebsk voivode Marcjan Ogiń ski, in the 18th century played the role of the family mausoleum. The two-spire basilica with a transept and a dome followed in its shape the Jesuits’ most magnificent Lithuanian churches – in Vilnius (St Casimirus church), and especially in Grodno. Composition of the facade was similar to the elevations of the missionaries’ churches in Vilnius and Franciscans in Pinsk. The bipartite elevations of the transept – characteristic of most Jesuit churches in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania – directly followed the architecture of the Jesuit church in Nieśwież, where they may have been an echo of the Crusaders Facade of the Ressurection Basilica in Jerusalem. Compared to the oversimplified, and sometimes indeed primitive divisions and details characteristic of the architecture of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the first thirty years of the 18th century the careful articulation of the Witebsk church presented a suprisingly high standard that speaks well not only for the classical (Italian) education of the author of the design but also about the masons’ qualifications. This inclines one to assume that a design prepared earlier, perhaps as soon as 1684, to which year the later inspector dated (unjustly) the beginning of construction, was used. Works conducted in the years 1761-1767 introduced late baroque elements to the architecture of the college, that were characteristic of its ‘Vilnius’ variety. Among others, the elegant western frontage of the college with the towered structure of the gate was built then; as also was the new picturesque dome of the church. In autumn 1760, probably for designing the buildings, the Jesuits paid Johann Christoph Glaubitz (died in 1767), although a Mr Mackiewicz was called “the architect of the church dome and the spire” (1765-1767). At the same time modernization of the decoration was under way: in 1767 the altar painting of the Immaculate Conception by Szymon Czechowicz was bought; the painter was employed in the Polock college at that time. In the years 1794-1796 and 1800-1801 the architecture professor, Father Gaetano Angiolini SJ having brought from Verona pictures painted by Saverino della Rosa (1743-1821) decorated the church with confessionals and altars. In 1799-1808, perhaps according to his design, a new school building was constructed in the style of ascetic classicism that was called ‘the house with the dome’. After the Jesuits were expelled from Russia (1820) the buildings belonged to the Basilians (1822-1839). In 1841 they were turned over to the authorities of the Orthodox Archdiocese. The church’s adaptation into St Nicolaus’ Orthodox church that was conducted by the architect Bettini (1842-1843) had the character of a superficial classicisation. Eclectic and pseudo- Ruthenian motifs were only brought by the thorough restructuring (1868-1872) according to Mikołaj Czagin’s design. The belfry over the gate was pulled down then. The interior of the Orthodox church was decorated by neo-Byzantine frescos (painted by Winogradow) and a wooden iconostasis (Paweł Warfołomiew from Moscow, the painter Rozanow). In 1893 a domed vestibule was introduced that preceeded the facade. The church, closed in 1929, was blown up on 12 April 1957. The Jesuit college and church in Witebsk had an important place in the panorama of baroque architecture of the north-east borderland of the Polish Republic. After the Middle Ages scarce stone Orthodox churches and ruins of princes’ castles remained. In the 17th century in the vast areas beyond the rivers Dźwina and Berezyna seven stone Orthodox churches, one Uniate, only one (!) Catholic and one Jewish synagogue were built. Two major lordly castles, a town-hall, an armoury, a few town gates and tenement houses were built. A decided majority of those stone buildings were located in Mohylew. The Witebsk fabrica ecclesiae preceeded the enlivening of building activity in other centres of White Ruthenia, as it happened only in the second third of the 18th century, due to the Societatis investments: in Mścisław (1730-48), Polock (1733-45, rebuilt 1762-65), Faszczówka (1738-57) and Orsza (1741-57). The churches in the three latter places (pulled down about 1960) repeated – with slight modifications – the space solution of St Joseph church in Witebsk, and in Faszczówka also the articulation of the outside followed it.
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 2002, 50, 4 Special Issue; 323-366
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Architektura Kościoła Pojezuickiego w Chojnicach
The Architecture of the Post-Jesuit Church in Chojnice
Autorzy:
Rogólski, Piotr P.
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1954591.pdf
Data publikacji:
2002
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
The former Jesuit church in Chojnice together with the college building forms a baroque complex, one of the most precious in East Pomerania. The history of the Chojnice Jesuits and the history of the construction of their monastery church may be reconstructed on the basis of the Jesuit chronicles: “Historia Residentiae Conecensi Societatis Jesu” of the years 1620- 1773 (ARSI). The present article presents an analysis of the style of the Chojnice church architecture, defines its artistic origin and gives a precise account of the Jesuits’ role. Bringing Jesuits to Chojnice resulted from the denomination rivalry in the town that had unfavourable results for the Catholics. From the middle of the 16th century, when the Protestant denomination was accepted officially, in King’s Prussia Reformation tendencies became more intensive. Protestantism was also a sign of the Prussian towns-people’s separatism; however, political dependence of that province from the Crown gave a good opportunity for a counter-Reformation action. At the beginning of the 18th century the Jesuits decided to build a new brick church; however, initially Primate Stanisław Szembek did not allow it because of the close neighbourhood of the big Gothic parish church and the cemetary. It should be thought that a change in this attitude was influenced by the denomination rivalry in the town. The construction of the church was begun in 1718, but because of shortage of money the work was stopped. Only in the years 1730-1733 construction was started again, according to a new design, and the work was finished in 1744. The Chojnice church is a single nave, two-span building, with rows of side chapels that are connected with narrow passages. The interior of the wide nave is divided into two spans by massive wall pillars with pairs of pilasters that suppport the żaglaste vaults. The space between the pillars is formed by chapel-gallery anexes, the gallery vaults being as tall as the nave. The pillars’ quoins are cut, which visually stresses centralization of space. Illusionistic polychromies and a rich stucco decoration are a significant complementation of the interior. In the subject literature defining the architectonic type of the Chojnice church is the basic research problem, as well as finding out about its origin and architect. According to some researchers it is a halowy building with two aisles (among others, G. Chmarzyń ski, B. Makowski, E. Dehio and E. Gall); other authors say it is a halowo-emporowy building (e.g. T. Chrzanowski and M. Kornecki) or a halowy one (A. J. Baranowski). Most researchers assume that the Jesuit builder, Jan Zelmer, was the architect of the church. The post-Jesuit church in Chojnice is the type of wall-pillar building with galleries, and with respect to its form it is a longitudinal-central solution where within the frames of the traditional longitudinal arrangement, here limited to two spans, centralization of the interior is strongly stressed compositionally. The region closest to Chojnice where this model of church occurs is Silesia where this type of buildings was especially popular in the baroque period. The question appears if the Chojnice church was an architectonic transfer from the Silesian circle and if its design is based on a particular model. On the basis of comparative analysis we may state that the Chojnice church reveals a general resemblance to Silesian ones only in the architectonic system. From the point of view of disposition of the plan we cannot find a similar building in Silesia, whereas the pilgrimage church in Trautmannshofen (Upper Palatinate) built in 1683-1686 reveals closer analogies. A similar architectonic system is found in the circle of Czech architecture in the Visitation of the Virgin Mary church in Hejnice (1722-1729). We also do not find the motif of double windows in the span system in the circle of Silesian architecture, but such an arrangement was popular in south Germany (e.g. the Benedictine church in Weingarten, 1715-1725). In the case of the Jesuit church in Chojnice the unknown architect created another version of a nave interior with chapel-gallery annexes and with a developed wall-pillar system; the whole was composed in the system of a two-span interior. One of the building inspectors of that church on behalf of the Jesuit order was Jan Zelner who came to Chojnice from the Poznań college. The Chojnice church, in its interior solution, is a remote architectonic import from the Czech circles and it was the Jesuits who made the decision about the import and its realization. Researchers stress the fact that the order adjusted its building foundations to the local tradition and needs as well as to the function and importance of a given centre. The area where wall-pillar churches with galleries occurred is limited mainly to the Habsburg monarchy provinces and to south Germany, that is to where there was strong rivalry between Catholics and Protestants, also in the field of architecture. In the area Jesuits propagated a defined kind of church architecture and their models from Munich, Dillingen, Prague, Olomouc and Legnica played an important role in development of baroque church architecture in Central Europe. The architectonic programme of these buildings responded to the order’s preaching needs and religious-propaganda tasks. On the basis of our findings we may state that Jesuits brought to Chojnice an architect, may be a Jesuit, just from the circle of the Catholic provinces of Germany. The innovatory architectonic programme of the church responded to the local needs, which was connected with denomination rivalry in the town itself and the Jesuits’ counter-Reformation tasks. The church fulfilled an important identification and prestige function that was transferred to the founders and the local Catholic society. The Jesuit church in Chojnice significantly influenced the development of the local architecture and its architectonic programme is repeated in the churches in Wysoka (the Wyrzysk district), Zamarte (a Bernardine one) and in Kcynia (a shod Carmelites’ one).
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 2002, 50, 4 Special Issue; 261-282
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
„Jezuickie intrygi” a problem stylu w ukraińskiej architekturze cerkiewnej drugiej połowy XIX wieku
„Jesuit Plots” and the Problem of Style in the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Architecture of the Second Half of the 19th Century
Autorzy:
Krasny, Piotr
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1954622.pdf
Data publikacji:
2002
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
One of the main elements of the Ukrainian national identity in Galicia was the attachment to the Greek-Catholic Church. From the time of the Spring of the Nations the Uniate priests became the main animators of the Ukrainian ‘national awakening’. They were involved in this activity also when performing their pastoral duties, or even liturgical ones. One cannot then wonder that looking for the Ukranian national style in architecture was done almost exclusively within Orthodox church building, and the choice of forms used in Greek-Catholic churches was a peculiar reflection of the discussion by the Church elites, in which the debate on the character of the Greek rite was interwoven with attempts at defining the vision of the Ukrainian nation and its place in Europe. In the sixties of the 19th century the pro-Moscow fraction had a strong influence among priests; it tried to prove close ethnical ties between the Ukrainians and Russians and wanted to ‘purify’ the Uniate rite from elements borrowed from Roman-Catholic liturgy owing to – as they said – ‘a Jesuit plot’. However, one of the most ardent Moscow-phils, Rev. Jan Naumowicz, admired the activity of the Russian Ivan Martynov, a member of the Society of Jesus and consultor of the congregation Propaganda Fide for eastern rites. Rev. Martynov wanted to reform the Uniate Church in such a way that it would serve first of all the idea of converting Russia to Catholicism. The idea of building an orthodox church in Lvov in the ‘purely Byzantine’ style, where Jesuits were to say the Holy Mass in the Greek rite, was an interesting element of the programme, especially praised by Rev. Naumowicz. It is almost certain that the structure was to be kept in the forms of the official Russian Orthodox church style worked out in the forties of the 19th century by Konstantin Thon. Opponents of the pro-Moscow fraction considered the clergymen belonging to it clandestine advocates of the Orthodox Church. Hence the neo-Byzantine stylistic solutions suggested by the Russian and propagated by the fervent adherent to a kind of Russification of the Uniate Church could be seen by them as ‘schismatic’. The neo-Byzantine forms given to the dome of the Przemyśl Greek-Catholic cathedral in 1866 met a lot of criticism and resulted in pulling it down soon. The basic tendency in Greek-Catholic church architecture in Galicia was looking for models for Orthodox and Uniate churches ‘in the many centuries old tradition of the Ukrainian architecture’. From it first the model of tripartite, three-domed church was derived, and a little later – the cross-shaped church with one dome. From the eighties of the 19th century the architect Vasil Nahirnyi started decorating the churches in the neo-Byzantine costume, however, looking for models in the cosmopolitic neo-Byzantinism of Theophil Hansen and avoiding all connections with the ‘schismatic’ style of Russian Orthodox churches. Nahirnyi’s neo-Byzantinism was accepted by Ukrainians as their national Uniate church style, which was probably connected with the provisions of the Lvov Synod (1891) that officially granted the Greek-Catholic rite the character of the Ukrainian national denomination. The Lvov initiative of Father Martynov proved to be only an interesting episode in the history of Greek- Catholic church architecture in Galicia.
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 2002, 50, 4 Special Issue; 575-587
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Architektura kościoła parafialnego w Gołębiu. Przyczynek do badań wpływu projektów Ottaviana Mascarina na architekturę polską pierwszej połowy wieku XVII
Architecture of the parish church in Gołąb. A contribution to the research on the impact of Ottaviano Mascarino’s projects on Polish architecture of the first half of the 17th century
Autorzy:
Stankiewicz, Aleksander
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1806821.pdf
Data publikacji:
2019-10-23
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Tematy:
Ottaviano Mascarino; Jerzy Ossoliński; Gołąb; architektura sakralna ok. 1600 r.; italianizm
Ottaviano Mascarino; Jerzy Ossoliński; Gołąb; sacred architecture around 1600; Italianism
Opis:
Kościół parafialny w Gołębiu wzniesiony w latach 1626-1634 należy do budowli wyróżniających się w krajobrazie polskiej architektury nowożytnej wieku XVII. Jego projektant oraz budowniczowie nie są znani, jednak jego plan został oparty na zrealizowanym w latach 1591-1598 kościele San Salvatore in Lauro w Rzymie, zaprojektowanym przez architekta Ottaviana Mascarina. Rzut nawy świątyni w Gołębiu, której artykulację tworzą pary kolumn flankujących obszerne nisze przeznaczone na ołtarze, wyraźnie odwołuje się do tej rzymskiej realizacji. Odmienną genezę mają natomiast fasada oraz dekoracje świątyni w Gołębiu. Ponieważ rzymski kościół Mascarina nie posiadał wówczas fasady, projektant kościoła w Gołębiu zdecydował się na wprowadzenie fasady dwuwieżowej, nawiązującej do podobnych rozwiązań, zastosowanych wcześniej w Czemiernikach (po 1603 r.) czy też Pińczowie (przed 1619). Dekoracja elewacji budowli wykonana w zaprawie nawiązuje do niemieckich wzorników graficznych oraz do motywów znanych z warsztatu rzeźbiarskiego Tomasza Nikla, ale stosowanych też przez muratorów z Kazimierza Dolnego. Przypuszczalnym dysponentem odpowiedzialnym za wybór dla Gołębia rzymskiego projektu był kanclerz Jerzy Ossoliński, fundator znany z innych realizacji opartych na planach Mascarina, przechowywanych w Accademia di San Luca w Rzymie.
The parish church in Gołąb, erected in the years 1626-1634, is one of the buildings that stand out from Polish modern architecture of the 17th century. Its designer and builders are not known, but its plan was based on the church of San Salvatore in Lauro in Rome, built between 1591 and 1598, designed by the architect Ottaviano Mascarino. The projection of the nave of the church in Gołąb, the articulation of which is made of pairs of columns flanking large niches intended for altars, clearly refers to San Salvatore in Lauro. The facade and decorations of the parish church in Gołąb have a different genesis. As San Salvatore in Lauro did not have a facade at that time, the designer of the church in Gołąb decided to introduce a two-tower facade, referring to similar solutions, previously used in Czemierniki (after 1603) or Pińczów (before 1619). The decoration of the facade of the building made in the mortar refers to the German graphic patterns and motifs known from the sculptural workshop of Tomasz Nikiel, but also used by the bricklayers from Kazimierz Dolny. The supposed administrator responsible for the selection of the Roman design for Gołąb was Chancellor Jerzy Ossoliński, a founder known for other realizations based on Mascarino’s plans, stored at the Accademia di San Luca in Rome.
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 2018, 66, 4; 5-31
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Wpływ fundacji papieskich na polską architekturę początku XVI wieku. Watykański kontekst mauzoleum prymasa Jana Łaskiego
Influence of Papal Foundations on Polish Architecture in Early 16th Century. The Vatican Context of the Mausoleum of Primate Jan Łaski
Autorzy:
Gryglewski, Piotr
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1791411.pdf
Data publikacji:
2020-12-22
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Tematy:
historia architektury
sztuka polska
architektura sakralna XVI w.
renesans
history of architecture
Polish art
church architecture 16th century
Renaissance
Opis:
Przedmiotem omówienia jest kaplica św. Stanisława, wzniesiona w pobliżu katedry gnieźnieńskiej z inicjatywy prymasa Jana Łaskiego między 1518 a 1523 r. (rozebrana w końcu XVIII w.). Fundacja tego centralnego, wolnostojącego mauzoleum zajmuje ważne miejsce w historii początków sztuki renesansowej w Polsce. Jej realizacja przebiegała równolegle z budową kaplicy – mauzoleum króla Zygmunta Starego na Wawelu. Arcybiskup Jan Łaski był zaangażowany w sprowadzenie do Polski Bartłomieja Berrecciego – projektanta królewskiej kaplicy, być może zaangażowanego również w projekcie gnieźnieńskim. Niewątpliwie wpływ na fundację Łaskiego miał jego pobyt w Rzymie w latach 1513-1515. Arcybiskup otrzymał wtedy zgodę na zebranie ziemi z rzymskiej nekropolii Campo Santo i prawo uświęcenia nią cmentarza przy katedrze w Gnieźnie. Z koncepcją mauzoleum wiązała się też zamówiona na Węgrzech w pracowni Jana Florentczyka płyta nagrobna. Na podstawie zachowanej linii fundamentów można wyróżnić wiele istotnych cech tej budowli. Dysponowała ona układem centralnym. Trzon miał formę cylindra, najprawdopodobniej przesklepionego kopułą. Trzy półkoliste apsydy tworzyły czytelny trichonchos. Od południa znajdowało się wejście do kaplicy. Nie mniej istotna był lokalizacja mauzoleum, usytuowanego między katedrą a kolegiatą św. Jerzego. Na tej samej osi znajdowała się pierwotna lokalizacja grobu św. Wojciecha. Podjęte w Gnieźnie rozwiązania mogły mieć źródła w rzymskim ośrodku artystycznym. Tkwią one w szeregu projektów i koncepcji pojawiających się wokół fundacji Juliusza II, renowacji bazyliki św. Piotra i koncepcji mauzoleum papieskiego. Miały one związek z twórczością Donato Bramantego i Giuliana da Sangallo. Watykańskie projekty architektoniczne były formułowane w kontekście wyjątkowego, historycznego znaczenia miejsca pochówku św. Piotra. Podobny, starożytny kontekst pojawiał się w Gnieźnie, miejscu związanym z początkami chrześcijaństwa w Polsce.
The analysis is devoted to the St. Stanislaus chapel erected near Gniezno Cathedral on the initiative of Primate Jan Łaski between 1518 and 1523 (pulled down in the late 18th century). Foundation of this central, free-standing mausoleum plays an important role in the history of the beginnings of Renaissance art in Poland. Its realisation took place simultaneously with construction of the chapel: the mausoleum of King Sigismund I the Old at Wawel. Archbishop Jan Łaski was involved in bringing to Poland Bartolommeo Berrecci, a designer of the royal chapel, who perhaps also participated in preparing the Gniezno design. Undoubtedly, the Łaski foundation was influenced by his stay in Rome in 1513-1515, when the Archbishop was permitted to take some soil from the Roman necropolis of Campo Samo and use it to sanctify the cemetery at Gniezno Cathedral. The concept of the mausoleum was also connected with the tombstones ordered in Hungary in Giovanni Fiorentino studio. On the basis of the preserved line of foundations, we can distinguish a number of important features of the building. It had a central layout. The core part took the form of a cylinder, most probably vaulted by the dome. Three semi-circular apses formed a elear triconch. From the south there was an entrance to the chapel. No less important was location of the mausoleum, situated between the cathedral and St George’s a collegiate church. On the same axis was the original location of the tomb of St. Adalbert. The solutions applied in Gniezno may have had their sources in a Roman art centre. They were used in a sedes of projects and concepts appearing around the Julius II foundation, renovation of St. Peter’s Basilica and the concept of the papai mausoleum. They were related to the work of Donato Bramante and Giuliano da Sangallo. The Vatican architectural designs were formulated in the context of unique historical signifi of St. Peter’s burial place. A similar, ancient context appeared in Gniezno, a place associated with the beginnings of Christianity in Poland.
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 2020, 68, 4 Special Issue; 109-138
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Protestantyzm w kulturze Śląska
Protestantism in the Silesian Culture
Protestantismus in der schlesischen Kultur
Autorzy:
Jaskóła, Piotr
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/31343337.pdf
Data publikacji:
2011
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Tematy:
Śląsk
życie kulturalne na Śląsku
protestantyzm na Śląsku
protestancka architektura i sztuka kościelna
protestancka kultura słowa
protestancka kultura muzyczna
Silesia
cultural life in Silesia
Protestantism in Silesia
Protestant church architecture and art
Protestant culture of the word
Protestant musical culture
Opis:
Der Artikel veranschaulicht den Einfluss und den sehr großen Beitrag der evangelischen Christen in den verschiedenen Bereichen des kulturellen Lebens in Schlesien. Die einzelne Probleme wurden in der geschichtlichen und theologisch-kirchlichen Perspektive abgefasst. Das Thema wurde inhaltlich in vier Punkte aufgeteilt: Geschichtliche Anfänge und Bedingtheiten des Protestantismus in Schlesien (1), Evangelische Architektur und kirchliche Kunst (2), Evangelische Kultur des Wortes (3) und Evangelische Musikkultur (4). Die multikonfessionelle Elemente beweisen die multikulturellen Dimensionen des Lebens in Schlesien.
Źródło:
Roczniki Teologii Ekumenicznej; 2011, 3; 117-132
2081-6731
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Teologii Ekumenicznej
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
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