Kościół pw. św. Jakuba Apostoła, Wągrowiec
Facts and practical information
St. James the Apostle Church in Wągrowiec is a Roman Catholic parish church in the city of Wągrowiec. It is located at Klasztorna street.
It is one of the most valuable monuments of church architecture in Wielkopolska, Late Gothic, built in the second half of the 16th century, using material from an older Romanesque church. The construction was led by Piotr from Szamotuły and Bartosz from Poznań. The western and eastern gables are late Renaissance. In the church walls there are numerous cavities of circular shape drilled in the bricks. They occur in almost all Gothic churches in Wielkopolska, Ziemia Lubuska, Pomerania, and Warmia. Their origin can be explained by folk medicine. In the past, consecrated bricks were ground for medicine for people and animals. Next to the cavities, the names and dates from the 16th and 17th centuries are engraved in the bricks. Among them are the names of teachers from the villages of Łęgowo and Tarnowo.
The interior has three naves and a hall. Star vaults in the central nave, the chancel and the chapel, cross vaults in the side naves. Renaissance frescos from the end of the 16th century in the chapel from 1588. The main Renaissance altar from about 1600. The Renaissance paintings from the main altar, sent to Warsaw for conservation, were burnt during the siege of the city in 1939. Now they have been restored on the basis of photographic images. A renaissance pulpit, renaissance and baroque side altars, a rainbow beam with a passion group from the end of the 16th century.
Klasztorna 4Wągrowiec 62-100
Kościół pw. św. Jakuba Apostoła – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Wągrowiec Abbey, Kościół pw. św. Apostołów Piotra i Pawła, Kościół pw. św. Mikołaja, Kościół pw. Wniebowzięcia NMP.