Explore Religious Heritage Across Europe

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Church of St. Andrej

Church of St. Andrej

Bizeljsko, SI

The church of St. Andrej was first mentioned in sources in 1545. According to the architectural features, it is probable that the building underwent a complete renovation in the 17th century when a closed polygonal presbytery was added to the old nave, in which a new altar was erected.

Church of St. Anne

Church of St. Anne

Kokar, FI

The Church of St. Anne in Kökari would be the third church on this site. It was built on the ruins of a former abbey church, using stones from the old buildings. Construction work began in 1769 and was completed in 1784. It is estimated that between 1510 and 1520 a two-nave church of grey stone was probably built in Kökari for the use of the Franciscan monastery.

Church of St. Anne

Church of St. Anne

Vilnius, LT

The Church of St. Anne, more commonly known as the Bernardine Church of Vilnius, belongs to the Bernardine monks. A first small wooden church burned in 1475 gave way to a brick church built in the early sixteenth century. It is now the largest gothic religious building in Vilnius.

Church of St. Anthony of Padua

Church of St. Anthony of Padua

Forest, BE

This church, consecrated to St. Anthony of Padua was completed in 1897. The Neo-Gothic style building was built in two stages.

Church of St. Anthony of Padua

Church of St. Anthony of Padua

Bugojno, BA

The church of St. Anthony of Padua was built between 1879 and 1886. The architecture of this church, one of the largest churches in Bosnia and Herzegovina, together with that of Tolisa, imitates that of the basilicas. The bell tower is a much later construction from the late 1970s. In the first half of the 1980s, the church was covered with copper. During the last war, the church was severely damaged and the bell tower caught fire.

Church of St. Anthony of Padua

Church of St. Anthony of Padua

Constanța, RO

The Church of St. Anthony of Padua was built in 1938 according to the plans of the Roman architect Simon (1900-1981). This neo-Romanesque church, which imitates the churches of northern Italy, replaces an old church from 1886. In 1944, when Soviet troops occupied the town, the church was put out of use and in the years to come it was vandalized. In 1947, the church was returned to the Catholics. Abandoned in the early 1950s, the church was restored in the same decade, then in the 1980s and in 2012.

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