St. Nicholas Church, Tallinn
| St Nicholas' Church, Tallinn | |
|---|---|
| Niguliste Museum | |
Estonian: Niguliste kirik | |
St Nicholas' Church, Tallinn | |
| 59°26′10″N 24°44′33″E / 59.43598°N 24.74263°E | |
| Location | Tallinn |
| Country | Estonia |
| Language | Estonian |
| Denomination | None |
| Previous denomination | Catholic, Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church |
| Website | nigulistemuuseum |
| History | |
| Status | Deconsecrated |
| Founded | c. 1230–1275 |
| Dedication | Saint Nicholas |
| Architecture | |
| Functional status | Museum |
| Heritage designation | Kultuurimälestis (no.1215) |
| Designated | 20 September 1995 |
| Architectural type | Basilica |
| Style | Gothic |
| Years built | c. 1230–1275 c. 1405–1420 (renovation) 1515 (tower) |
| Closed | 9 March 1944 |
| Specifications | |
| Number of towers | 1 |
| Tower height | 105 metres (344 ft 6 in) |
| Materials | Stone |
St. Nicholas Church (Estonian: Niguliste kirik, German: Nikolaikirche) is a medieval church building in Tallinn (Reval), Estonia. It was dedicated to Saint Nicholas, the patron of the fishermen and sailors.
Originally built as a Catholic church in the 13th century, it turned Lutheran during the Protestant Reformation in 1520s. It was partially destroyed in the Soviet bombing of Tallinn in World War II. The building itself has since been restored; however, as a church without its own congregation, it has not been used by the Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church for regular religious services since World War II. At present it houses the Niguliste Museum, a branch of the Art Museum of Estonia, focusing mainly on ecclesiastical art from the Middle Ages onward. It is also used as a concert hall.