St. Kolumba church

E702774

St. Kolumba church was a historic Catholic parish church in Cologne, Germany, largely destroyed in World War II and later integrated into the modern Kolumba art museum complex.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (43)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Catholic parish church
former church building
architecturalType church
associatedWith Kolumba museum chapel by Peter Zumthor NERFINISHED
category Destroyed churches in Germany
Roman Catholic churches in Cologne
World War II ruins in Germany
city Cologne NERFINISHED
country Germany NERFINISHED
currentUse integrated into museum complex
site of Kolumba museum chapel
denomination Roman Catholicism
surface form: Roman Catholic Church
diocese Archdiocese of Cologne NERFINISHED
eraOfMainStructure Middle Ages NERFINISHED
event bombing of Cologne in World War II
fate largely destroyed in World War II
function parish church
place of Catholic worship
hasPart Gothic foundations
archaeological remains from Roman to medieval periods
war ruin of church walls
heritage medieval parish church
heritageStatus historic church site
integratedInto Kolumba Diocesan Museum NERFINISHED
Kolumba art museum NERFINISHED
Kolumba museum building by architect Peter Zumthor NERFINISHED
locatedIn Cologne NERFINISHED
Cologne Old Town NERFINISHED
North Rhine-Westphalia
historic center of Cologne NERFINISHED
materialRemains church ruins preserved within museum
namedAfter Saint Columba NERFINISHED
owner Archdiocese of Cologne NERFINISHED
partlyPreservedAs archaeological site
ruins
partOf Catholic parishes of Cologne NERFINISHED
postWarDevelopment site incorporated into new diocesan museum
region Western Germany NERFINISHED
religiousAffiliation Catholicism
religiousOrder secular parish (not monastic)
significance important medieval parish in Cologne
significantEvent destruction during air raids in 1943
war World War II NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Kolumba Museum builtOnSiteOf St. Kolumba church