Gottlieb Scholtze (1713 – 6 April 1783) was a German pipe organ builder. He had his workshop in Neuruppin since 1740. He was a pupil of Joachim Wagner. Along with Ernst Julius Marx and Johann Wilhelm Grüneberg, he is considered the most important organ builder in the Mark Brandenburg in the second half of the 18th century. A total of 32 new buildings are recorded by him, including the organ of the parish church in Küstrin.
Year | Location | Building | class=unsortable style="width:160px" | Picture! | Manual | Casing | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1749 | I/P | 16 | Restored in 2009 by Alexander Schuke Potsdam Orgelbau | ||||
1754 | II/P | 32 | In 2014, a sponsoring association was founded in order to be able to restore the Scholtze organ, which is currently not playable.[1] | ||||
1756 | |||||||
1759 | St. Katharinen, reconstruction. | II/P | 27 | Restored in 2007 by Reinhard Hüfken and restored to its original condition. Contains pipe material from the predecessor organs by Hans Scherer der Jüngere (1627/1628) and by Arp Schnitger (1707/1708)[2] [3] | |||
1760 | I | 9 | Restored in 2000.[4] | ||||
1764 | |||||||
1764 | Zollchow bei Milow | I/P | 9 | New organ built around 1860 by Lütkemüller, casing and four stops by Scholtze preserved.[5] | |||
1765 | Kotzen (Havelland) | ||||||
1767 | Rheinsberg | St. Laurentius | I/P | 13 | Rebuilt several times, casing and some stops preserved | ||
1769 | Templin | Sankt-Maria-Magdalena-Kirche | II/P | 27 | Casing preserved | ||
1770 | Schönhausen (Elbe) | Dorfkirche St. Marien und Willebrord | I/P | 14 | |||
1772 | Fürstenwalde/Spree | St Mary's Cathedral, Fürstenwalde | Destroyed in April 1945 | ||||
1772 | Müllrose | Donated; casing preserved.[6] | |||||
1775 | Seedorf (Lenzen) | Village church | I/p | 8 | Preserved | ||
1777 | II/P | 34 | →Orgel |