File:Der Ochsenturm bei Imsum.jpg

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Deutsch: Nach schriftlichen Quellen wurde die Kirche im Jahr 1218 errichtet. Sie war ein rechteckiger Feldsteinbau mit eingezogenem quadratischem Chor. Geweiht war sie den Heiligen Bartholomäus und Nikolaus. Wie aus den unterschiedlichen Materialien zu ersehen ist, war außer dem Kirchenschiff auch der Turm zunächst aus Feldstein errichtet. Um 1500 wurde in mittelalterlichem Klosterbackstein der breite Granitbogen zum westlichen Joch bis auf zwei kleinere Bögen zugemauert und der Turm erhöht. Der Bauernhof der Familie Brinkama musste ab 1667 einem Fort zu Verteidigung der Wesermündung weichen. Das Dorf Lebstedt ging in der Weihnachtsflut 1717 unter. 1875 brannte die Kirche nach einem Blitzschlag ab. Daraufhin errichtete die hannoversche Landeskirche in Weddewarden ein neues Kirchengebäude und verkaufte das alte auf dem Friedhof 1877 auf Abriss – bezüglich des Kirchenschiffs; den Turm hatte der Käufer als Seezeichen zu erhalten. Der Abriss erfolgte 1895. Große Teile des Materials wurden für den Unterbau des Leuchtturms Hohe Weg verwendet. Turm und Turmjoch der alten Kirche wurden gesichert und der runde Bogen zum ehemaligen Kirchenschiff mit Backstein zugemauert. Eine Restaurierung wurde 1930 durchgeführt. Der Turm dient heute als Aussichtsturm.
English: According to written sources, the church was built in 1218. It was a rectangular field stone building with a retracted square choir. It was dedicated to Saints Bartholomew and Nicholas. As can be seen from the different materials, both the nave and the tower were initially made of fieldstone. Around 1500, the wide granite arch to the western yoke was bricked up using medieval monastery brick, except for two smaller arches, and the tower was raised. From 1667 onwards, the Brinkama family's farm had to give way to a fort to defend the mouth of the Weser. The village of Lebstedt sank in the Christmas flood of 1717. In 1875 the church burned down after a lightning strike. The Hanover regional church then built a new church building in Weddewarden and sold the old one in the cemetery for demolition in 1877 - regarding the nave; The buyer had to keep the tower as a navigation mark. It was demolished in 1895. Large parts of the material were used for the substructure of the Hohe Weg lighthouse. The tower and tower yoke of the old church were secured and the round arch to the former nave was walled up with brick. A restoration was carried out in 1930. The tower now serves as a lookout tower.
This is a picture of the Baudenkmal (cultural heritage monument) according to the Cultural Heritage Protection Law of Lower Saxony with the ID 31273132 (Wikidata (P7900)).
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Author Xjvolker
Camera location53° 36′ 53.54″ N, 8° 31′ 04.43″ E Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

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current18:30, 16 September 2023Thumbnail for version as of 18:30, 16 September 20235,650 × 3,720 (16.95 MB)Xjvolker (talk | contribs)Uploaded own work with UploadWizard

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