Explore Religious Heritage Across Europe

Here you can search for a building to visit. You can use the map find destinations, or you can use the filters to search for a building based upon what different criteria.

Refine search

Værøy Old Church

Værøy Old Church

Værøy, NO

Værøy Old Church is a long wooden church built in Kabelvåg in 1714 and moved to Værøy in 1799. The church was restored and extended in 1884. The earliest mention of a church in Værøy is from 1589, but there is still furniture from a church in Værøy from the 15th century.

Vølstad Church

Vølstad Church

Nordre Land, NO

Vølstad church is a wooden church built in 1959. The architect of the church is Per Nordan, the grandson of the architect Jacob Wilhelm Nordan.

Waakt en Bidt

Leersum, NL

On the site of the demolished predecessor . The memorial stone on the front facade is a remnant of the old church building. Under the words "Watch and pray" is the date June 20, 1952. On that day, the placement of a temporary building began that - partly thanks to regular maintenance - would serve for more than six decades. A new stone has now been placed under the old memorial stone with the date July 25, 2015, the day the new church was completed.

Waalse kerk

Maastricht, NL

The Waalse kerk (Walloon Church, also called Franch church) is a Baroque temple dating from the 18th century. It was built to serve as a place of worship for the French-speaking Protestants after the conquest of Maastricht by Frederick Henry Prince of Orange and Count of Nassau.

Waalse Kerk

Leeuwarden, NL

Dutch Reformed Church, so-called Walloon Church. Single-nave chapel of the Dominican Sisters, consecrated in 1530, robbed of choir in 1839. In the church pulpit circa 1630 and organ with main work and upper work, made in 1740 by M. Schwartsburg. In 1854 extensively renovated by L. van Dam and Sons, on richly carved balustrade with coats of arms of Marie Louise van Hessen-Kassel and JW Friso 1742. In roof turret above the facade on the Grote Kerkstraat, clock by J. Balthasar, 1661, diam. 60.5 cm

Waalse kerk

Rotterdam, NL

The church replaces the old seventeenth-century Walloon church at the northwest end of the Hoogstraat, from which the virtually original Bätz-Witte organ from around 1865 was taken over. The new Walloon church was originally situated on a remnant of the original western city wall, which was filled in during the Second World War. The interior is equipped with wrought iron/bronze light fixtures, ceiling lamps, hymn boards and electric heaters designed by WH Gispen.

Waalse kerk

Leiden, NL

Walloon Church with consistory and sexton's house. Originally the chapel of St. Catherine's Hospital, in use for the Reformed church since 1600. Since 1635 in shared use by the Walloon Reformed, whose main church was the Church of Our Lady since 1584. Their property since 1820, with the abandonment of the Church of Our Lady, which had to be demolished. Consistory and sexton's house with brickwork in front of the original facade from 1635, restored in 1951.

Waddenkerk

De Cocksdorp, NL

Church built in 1841.

Wagenstraat Synagogue in Den Haag

Wagenstraat Synagogue in Den Haag

The Hague, NL

The synagogue is located behind the private residences of the Wagenstraat. It was consecrated in the year 1844. It replaced an older synagogue which was situated at the Voldersgracht (dated ca. 1721/23). The Neo-Classical main façade includes a cornice and triangular pediment with a tondo window. The entrance itself is also adorned with a triangular pediment is supported by Tuscan columns. Rounded arched windows can be found in the side walls of the building. The entrance originally contained an unknown Hebrew inscription and the date 5604 (1844 CE) but these were removed in the year 1981. The synagogue was oriented along the short axis which meant that the Torah ark was situated against the long southeastern wall. The bimah was placed at the center of the assembly hall, facing the Torah ark. The building, including the galleries which are supported by slender Ionic columns, were expanded in 1922. The complex was expanded with the establishment of an administrative building and a second synagogue along the Nieuwe Molstraat (demolished in 1981), designed by the architect H. Elte Phzn in the architectural style of the Amsterdam School. The interior of the synagogue was damaged by fire during the Second World War in 1944. Three years later, the building was again consecrated as a synagogue after which the Jewish religious services resumed. In 1976, the building became abandoned and was subsequently sold to the municipality of The Hague. The decorated Torah ark (ca. 1723) was removed and relocated to Israel in the same year. The building was repurposed as a mosque which opened its doors in the year 1979. The front façade of the building received Arabic inscriptions and two large steel minarets were placed in the forecourt of the building.

Walburga Tsjerke

Walburga Tsjerke

Drogeham, NL

The village church stands in the middle of a graveyard on a high sand ridge that resembles a mound. The original church and tower date from the early 13th century.

Be inspired