IACOBENI / JAKOBSDORF



In the document first acknowledging the village, several priests of the Superior Council of Kosd including a certain Nikolaus of Jacobsdorf, sue the bishop of Alba-Iulia to protest a 10% tax on their income to the bishopric. A registry from around 1500 tells of Iacobeni including 75 households, one mill, one school, three paupers and two abandoned courtyards. Considering that the average village had 40 households at that time, Iacobeni had a large population when the church was built.

The church

iacobeni1

The fact that the village is considerably old would indicate that there was an old church located on the site prior to the construction of the gothic church. This old church was most likely destroyed during the Great Tatar Invasion. The single nave gothic church was built in the 14th century. It has a pointed chancel arch that separates the choir from the apse. Initially the choir and the nave had the same height, but that changed when a penetration barrel vault with terracotta ribs was built over the nave. The choir, on the other hand, has a cross vault and the apse has a rudimentary penetration vault, indicating its old age.

 

The fortification


The precinct has an irregular shape and is surrounded by mantle walls supported from the outside by buttresses. The gate tower has two floors, a wall passage, and a portcullis protecting the gate. A bastion watched over the precinct on the northern side and was later transformed into a house for the keeper of the stronghold. There was once a tower on the southeast as well, but it has been demolished. The tower standing at the bottom of the hill is still preserved.

You can find more information about this church and many others on this CD dedicated to the fortified churches in Transylvania.

Page: 1 23
< 1 >
FOCUS
Copsa Mare / Grosskopisch
A free commune of the old Fundus Regius, Copsa Mare used to have some of the most vast and famous vineyards of the region, "The Wine Country". Two churches are mentioned as being used in this town. In the early 14th century, the holy service was recorded as being held in a three-nave gothic basilica; a 1283 document introduces the hypothesis of an earlier church.

SHOP

name
Fortified Churches Multimedia CD
15 EUR
Over 400 images revealing 44 saxon villages from Transylvania and their Fortified Churches, historical facts and architectural information, 19 local legends, an interactive map of the site, explicit hand-made drawings on how were the churches made, a see-through section ; all this toghether with a large, easy-to-use dictionary which will accurately explain all the specific or not so well-known terms you will come upon. Available in 5 languages: Romanian, German, English, Hungarian, French


Cultural heritage Mioritics
With the support of: Cooperazione Unesco Bresce