Stop point - Rajka

On the outskirts of the settlement, archaeologists have found the remains of a Roman limes. Its first church, dedicated to Saint Martin, was built in the 13th century. Its tower was built on the walls of a Roman watchtower. During the last Turkish campaign against Vienna in 1683, the village was destroyed. All that remains of the medieval building are the pointed-arched, masonry windows of the tower, the mural of the south wall and the 14th century sacristy niche. The church took its present form in the Baroque period. In one of the sculpted windows on the west façade is a statue of St. Martin, the church's namesake saint. The painting on the main altar depicts the glorification of Saint Martin. At the bottom of the painting is the text MARTINUS HIC PAUPER COELUM DIVES INGREDITUR HYMNUS COELESTIS HONORATUR. The rich decoration of the altars, the angel figures and the gilded statues of the saints show signs of the mature Baroque. On either side of the pulpit are depictions of bishops, one of whom is presumably St Martin offering gold coins to a beggar at his feet. The other shows the bishop holding a flaming heart and a shepherd's crook. On the ceiling in front of the choir is the scene of Amiens. Martin, dismounting from his horse, gives the beggar his cloak. A marble plaque in the wall tells of the village where the great composer Ferenc Liszt's great-grandfather and grandfather Ádám Liszt were born.


Hasonló találatok

Stop point - Sopronnémeti

Sopronnémeti

St Andrew's Roman Catholic Church was built around 1720, with a baroque altar and pulpit. The modern Lutheran church, next to...

More

Stop point - Nemeskér

Nemeskér

Nemeskér is one of the centres of evangelicalism in Western Transdanubia. The village was declared an articular village in 1681,...

More

Stop point - Perenye

Perenye

Archaeological evidence shows that the village was inhabited as early as the Bronze Age. In later times the Celts and later the...

More

Stop point - Bágyogszovát

Bágyogszovát

The present settlement was formed in 1950 by the merger of the villages of Bágyog and Szovát. The first mention of medieval...

More

9700 Szombathely Ősz u. 4. • +36 30 352 0579 • viasanctimartinihungary@gmail.com