Trampeli organ in the village church of Zitzschen

Klangkörper & Ensemble
The brothers Johann Gottlob and Christian Wilhelm Trampeli from Adorf built the Zitzschen organ as Opus 50.
The brothers Johann Gottlob (1742 - 1812) and Christian Wilhelm Trampeli (1748 - 1803) from Adorf built the Zitzschen organ as Opus 50. On November 30.11.1795, 25, the acceptance test was carried out by the Leipzig Nicolai organist August Eberhard Müller. II/2 In the course of the second half of the 19th century, the upper organ in particular was re-arranged. The two reed voices Vox humana 8' and the trombone 16' in the pedal were removed. Between 1990 and 2007, a fundamental reconstruction and restoration was carried out by the organ building company Wünning, Olbersdorf. The organ is one of the largest and largely original Trampeli organs.

Text: Klaus Gernhardt

Logistics

main work (C-d''')

1 drone 16'
2 Principal 8'
3 Viola da Gamba 8'
4 Stark Gedackt 8'
5 Octave 4'
6 Rohrflöte 4'
7 Quinta 3'
8 Octava 2'
9 Flageolet 1'
10 Cornett 3-way (a-d''')
11 Mixture 4 times

Oberwerk (C-d''')

12 Principal (a-d''') 8'
13 Quintatön 8'
14 Lieblich Gedackt 8'
15 Principal 4'
16 Flauto amabile 4'
17 Nasat 3'
18 Octava 2'
19 Sifflöt 1'
20 Mixture 3 times
21 Vox humana 8'

Pedal (C-c')

22 sub-bass 16'
23 Violonbass 16'
24 Octave Bass 8'
25 Trombone Bass 16'
Tremulant to the main work
suspension to the upper work
manual sliding coupling
pedal coupler

Good to know

Organization

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License (master data)

Leipzig Tourism and Marketing GmbH
License: no copyright required (public domain) (no copyright)

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The picture shows the modern Zwenkau tourist information office from the outside; behind it, one can just make out the harbor on Lake Zwenkau.
Tourist-Kontor Zwenkau
Tourist information
swing car
Historical site

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