The
King and architect dies
The Royal building master Nicolai Eigtved dies in June
1754 in Copenhagen, who stops the building
of the Marble Church for some time. Furthermore on 14
January 1766 - King Frederik V dies
- and finally in 1770, King
Christian VII (1749-1808) - ruled Denmark and
Norway 1766-1808) decides to suspend his father’s
project “until further notice” due to lack
of financial funds and heavy budget cuts of the Frederiksstad
project.
The
Project Suspended
and C. F. Tietgen
For the next 100 years the works stopped.
The walls had reached a height of barely twenty metres
and the church was then nicknamed “The
Marble Church”. The site stood as a picturesque
ruin in the middle of Copenhagen and a popular motif
for many artists. Nevertheless - the banker and financier
C. F. Tietgen took over the ruin and
building site in 1874 in order to ensure
the completion of the royal project. Tietgen also had
in mind that the spirit and thoughts of national priest
and hymn writer N. S. F. Grundtvig (1783
1872) should symbolize the religious adoration in the
new parish church - as Grundtvig was a very central
and influential person in Danish religious life.
The Rebuilding
The rebuilding of the Marble Church started slowly in
1874 and C. F. Tietgen chose Ferdinand
Meldahl as the leading architect of the reconstruction
- as he could fulfil Tietgen’s idea of building
“A Grundtvigian Cathedral”.
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