St. Peter's Church, Utrecht
Appearance
St. Peter's Church (Dutch: Pieterskerk) is a Reformed and former Roman Catholic church in the city of Utrecht in the Netherlands, dedicated to Peter the Apostle. It is one of the city's oldest churches. Its construction began in 1039 and it was inaugurated on 1 May 1048 by Bernold, Bishop of Utrecht (although the lost west towers were probably only finished about a century after the inauguration). The church was the eastern end of Utrecht's "Kerkenkruis", of which the Domkerk the centre is. Characteristic of the Romanesque style in which it is built are the church's large nave pillars, each hewn from one piece of red sandstone, and the crypt under the choir. The building is now used by the Walloon Church.
Gallery
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The choir of the Pieterskerk seen from the southeast
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Interior of the Pieterskerk
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Crypt of the Pieterskerk
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One of the Romanesque reliefs from the Pieterskerk
Dutch Rijksmonument 18297
Categories:
- Buildings and structures completed in 1048
- Churches completed in the 1040s
- 11th-century churches
- Churches in Utrecht (city)
- Rijksmonuments in Utrecht (city)
- Reformed church buildings in the Netherlands
- Romanesque architecture in the Netherlands
- Dutch Reformed Church buildings
- Protestant churches converted from Roman Catholicism