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Keywords

Estonia
Valdemar II.
Schwertbrüderorden
Livonian Brothers of the Sword
Church of the Holy Spirit
Bernt Notke
Teutonic Order
Reval
Eesti
Heilig-Geist-Kirche
Estland
Tallinn
Püha Vaimu kirik


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Tallinn - Püha Vaimu kirik

Tallinn - Püha Vaimu kirik
Tallinn, the capital city of Estonia, is situated on the shore of the Gulf of Finland of the Baltic Sea. It is only 80 kilometres south of Helsinki. From the 13th century until the first half of the 20th century Tallinn was known as Reval.

The first recorded claim over the place was laid by Denmark after a raid in 1219 led by Valdemar II. In 1227, the Order of the Brothers of the Sword conquered Reval and three years later recruited 200 Westphalian and Lower Saxon merchants from Gotland, who settled below the castle and were granted freedom of customs and land. In 1238 Reval fell back to Denmark, Under renewed Danish rule, the city rapidly grew in size and economic importance. In 1248, the Danish king granted it the Lübische Stadtrecht (town charter). Due to the strategic location, its port became a significant trade hub, especially in the 14–16th centuries when Tallinn grew in importance as the northernmost member city of the Hanseatic League.

The king of Denmark sold Reval along with other land possessions in northern Estonia to the Teutonic Knights in 1346.

The Püha Vaimu kirik (Church of the Holy Spirit) is mentioned in written sources for the first time in 1319. The church was part of a greater almshouse complex and dedicated to the Holy Ghost.

In 1630, the tower received its current appearance, which however is a reconstruction as the tower was ravaged by fire in 2002. The two-nave church was the first church in Estonia where services were held in Estonian, and in 1535 the first excerpts of the Catechism were printed here in Estonian.

The church has a remarkable main altar, a work by the Kübeck master Bernt Notke. The triptych dates from 1483 and depicts, on the central panel, the descent of the Holy Ghost on the twelve apostles at Pentecost.

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