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Peter Thumb (18 December 1681 – 4 March 1766) was an Austrian architect and master builder whose family came from Bezau, Vorarlberg, in the westernmost part of Austria. He was active in Baden, the Black Forest, Alsace, Upper Swabia, on and around Lake Constance, and in Switzerland. He is best known for his Rococo architecture, mainly in Southern Germany. Outstanding examples of his work include the pilgrimage church at Birnau on Lake Constance and the monastery library at the Abbey of Saint Gall, Saint Gallen, Switzerland.
Life
Peter Thumb was born in Bezau on 18 December 1681, a son of the Vorarlberg master builder Michael Thumb. He first went to work for the stonemason Michael Berbig in Au (Vorarlberg), then worked for his later father-in-law, the master builder Franz Beer. His first major works were the St. Mauritius Abbey Church (Ebersmunster) in Alsace and the church and library of the St. Peter Monastery in the Black Forest. In 1725 he was granted citizenship in Constance, Germany, and in 1737 he became a member of the city's Grand Council.
After St. Peter, Thumb abandoned the traditional Vorarlberg wall pier scheme of church construction.
As in the pilgrimage church of Birnau, Thumb made use of two architectural devices in Mengen, Germany (1741-1744): 1. He added a continuous gallery connected to the organ gallery halfway up the wall. 2. He created space for two side altars with two arched cantilevers (conches) in the fourth nave axis. For the project "Mengen" in 2003 in the Generallandesarchiv Karlsruhe numerous floor plans and elevations were made accessible, unknown up until then.
The pilgrimage church Birnau, which he built in 1747-1750 for the Salem Monastery, is considered his masterpiece. Thumb created solid architecture, in combination with Joseph Anton Feuchtmayer's playful figurative decoration and Gottfried Bernhard Göz's ceiling frescoes. With its majestic, picturesque location on Lake Constance, Birnau is one of the main sights on the Upper Swabian Baroque Route (Oberschwäbische Barockstraße).
Thumb’s Abbey Library of St. Gall is one of the most important Baroque libraries. Together with the entire monastery complex of the Fürstabtei St. Gallen, it enjoys the status of World Cultural Heritage site. The east facade and other parts of the monastery church in St. Gall were built by Johann Michael Beer von Bildstein, presumably according to designs by Peter Thumb.
Streets have been named after Thumb in Freiburg im Breisgau, in St. Peter (Hochschwarzwald), in Friedenweiler, in Rust (Baden), in Waldkirch, in Cologne,[1] Konstanz, Hilzingen, Singen (Hohentwiel), Waldshut-Tiengen, Weingarten (Württemberg), and Bregenz.[2] The parish church in Schwerzen is said to have been built after his model. The steeple of the Assumption (Schuttern) Conventual Church, from 1722-23, is also attributed to him.[3]
Peter Thumb's works include:
Parish Church Lachen in Canton Schwyz, 1707-1711.
St. Mauritius Abbey Church (Ebersmunster) in Alsace, 1708-1712 (facade and towers) and 1719-1727.
Church of St. Martin in Erstein, 1715, later neo-Romanesque by Antoine Ringeisen.
Neuenburg Castle (Guebwiller), town residence of the Fürstabtei Murbach in Guebwiller|Gebweiler in Alsace, 1715-1718.
St. Trudpert's Abbey: the nave of the abbey church, circa 1715–22, and the conventual buildings, 1738–39.
Monastery of Ettenheimmünster monastery and church re-construction, from 1718.
Our Lady of Thierenbach Pilgrimage Church near Jungholtz in Alsace, 1719-1723.
Hans-Martin Gubler: The Vorarlberg baroque master builder Peter Thumb. 1681-1766. a contribution to the history of southern German baroque architecture. Thorbecke, Sigmaringen 1972 ISBN 3-7995-5016-X.
Adolf Hacker: Peter Thumb and the Vorarlberg Minster Scheme. Ein baugeschichtlicher Querschnitt, in: Schriften des Vereins für Geschichte des Bodensees und seiner Umgebung, 68th Jg. 1941/42, pp. 7-22 (digitalisat).
Hitchcock, Henry Russell. Rococo Architecture in Southern Germany. Phaidon 1968, Chapter IV, Peter II Thumb.
Norbert Lieb: The baroque master builders of Vorarlberg. 3rd ed. Schnell und Steiner, Munich u. a. 1976 ISBN 3-7954-0410-X.
Christof Rieber: Monastery of Mengen. In: Edwin Ernst Weber (ed.): Klöster im Landkreis Sigmaringen. Lindenberg 2005, pp. 261-280.
Rudolf Werneburg: Peter Thumb und seine Familie. Contributions to southern German church architecture. (= Studies in German Art History; 182) Heitz, Strasbourg 1916 (at the same time dissertation of the University of Strasbourg under the title St. Peter auf dem Schwarzwald und Ebersmünster).
^Dr. Martin Ruch, Luisa Galiato, Ekkehard Klem (2003). Kloster- und Pfarrkirche Mariae Himmelfahrt Schuttern in der Gemeinde Friesenheim. Lindenberg: Kunstverlag Josef Fink. ISBN3-89870-121-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^See Hitchcock, 1968, 166-173 for discussion about Thumb's involvement with the abbey church