Lauritz de Thurah

Lauritz de Thurah

Laurids Lauridsen de Thurah, known as Lauritz de Thurah (March 4, 1706 - September 5, 1759), was a Danish architect and architectural writer. He became the most important Danish architect of the late baroque period. As an architectural writer and historian he made a priceless contribution to the understanding of both Denmark's architectural heritage and building construction in his day.

Youth and early training

He was born Laurids Lauridsen Thura in Aarhus, the third son of parish priest Laurids Thura, later Bishop of Ribe, and wife Helene Cathrine de With. He was educated at home by the elder Thura, a literate scholar and able teacher. By chance he come into contact with the royal house when King Frederik IV called on the Bishop, and chose the boy and his older brother Didrich for military service. In 1719 he went to Copenhagen as a military cadet ("landkadet") to receive an education for the Engineer Corps at the Military Cadet Academy ("Landkadetakademiet").

He was employed in 1725 as Assistant Resident Engineer in the Holstein Engineering Corps, and he moved to Rendsburg where he served from 1725-1729. With an interest in improving his lot in life by eventually coming into an architectural career, he enthusiastically studied the local building style, and petitioned the king for a royal grant to study civil architecture on a longer travel to foreign lands. In order to attain this he made carefully detailed drawings of Rendsburg's fortifications, churches and houses, and a preliminary construction drawing for a suspension bridge.

The king was impressed, and promised to give him funds, but instead he gave Thura and his friend Lieutenant Holger Rosenkrantz additional surveying and drawing assignments. Finally Thura, after having sent the king many reminders to his promised financial assistance, went to Copenhagen and was put to a final test, before receiving the economic grant so he and Rosenkrantz could travel.

Thura also made drawings and measurements of the newest castle in Denmark, Fredensborg, which were given as a gift to the Count of Hesse, before he traveled.

Thura and Rosenkrantz left in 1729, and visited a number of German cities, including Kassel, where they made careful studies and measurements of buildings. They traveled further to Italy, France, Holland and England before returning to Denmark in 1731.

Career in Denmark

After his return home Thura rose rapidly up the ranks. He became Resident Engineer in 1732. In 1733 he was named Royal Building Master with supervisory responsibility for royal buildings on Zealand and on Lolland-Falster. At the same time he was promoted to Captain in the Engineering Corps.

In 1732-1736 he designed and built the royal Palace in Roskilde, also known as The Yellow Palace. ("Det gule Palæ") on the site of the old Bishop’s palace east of Roskilde Cathedral. The four-wing baroque building became the headquarters of the Duke of Wellington during the English siege of Copenhagen in 1807, and now houses the Museum of Contemporary Art.

In 1733-1739 he worked on the first remodelling and expansion of Hirschholm Palace for King Christian VI and his consort Queen Sophie Magdalene.

In 1735 he receives a royal grant to collect information and to write a comprehensive work on architecture in Denmark, detailing all the royal buildings in the land. This work, eventually called "Den danske Vitruvius" ("The Danish Vitruvius"), would take up increasing amounts of his time as his architectural assignments diminished.

In 1734-1736 de Thurah built the palatial hunting lodge Jagtslottet Eremitagen ("The Hermitage") overlooking Jægersborg Dyrehave ("Jægersborg Deer Park") north of Copenhagen near Klampenborg, and facing east over the Øresund to Sweden. The grey-stone house with copper-clad mansard roof replaced another hunting lodge named "Hubertus", which had been built nearby in the 1600s. The original design featured an elevator-table (similar to a dumbwaiter) that could be raised from the cellar up to the dining room. In this way servants stayed in the cellar kitchen, where they prepared and set the table, and then it could be hoisted up to the dining room through a hatch in the floor. Diners would then eat unattended by servants or "en eremit" ("in the hermit style"). The lodge is still in use to this day for special occasions. .

But already after only a couple of year’s service back in Denmark, Thura began to feel that his baroque style had gone out of fashion. He felt that baroque was losing ground to rococo, a style mastered by another force in contemporary Danish architectural circles, Nicolai Eigtved, who would be Thura’s colleague and rival throughout most of his career. Eigtved, who returned to Denmark from his travels in 1735, became the king’s preferred architect, and Thura felt himself being more and more set to the side.

In 1736 Thura is promoted to Lieutenant Colonel.

He participated along with German architect Elias David Hausser and Nicolai Eigtved in the interior construction of Christiansborg Castle. He designed some of the interiors in the Queen’s apartments 1737-1740, but these were burned in the fire of 1794. He also created plans for the main staircase, the chapel, the marble bridge, the pavilions and the riding grounds, which were never realised.

On October 19, 1740 he married Anna Rosenørn, daughter of a General Major, and is conferred nobility under the name "de Thurah".

In 1741 de Thurah elevated the roof of the main building at Fredensborg Palace. In 1742 he was named to the Building Commission, and took on supervisory responsibility for royal buildings on Zealand and Funen.

In 1743-1744 he designed the final rebuilding of Hirschholm Palace, the most impressive building project of the period, known as "The Versailles of the North". The same year work is completed on the tower and spire for Our Lady’s Church ("Vor Frue Kirke"), also known as the Copenhagen Cathedral, in Copenhagen, partially after a drawing by Vincents Lerche. The building, however burned down during the bombardment of Copenhagen in 1807, and was rebuilt by Christian Frederik Hansen.

In 1744 de Thurah was promoted to Colonel.

His three-volume work "Den danske Vitruvius" is published 1746-1749, and contains almost 400 drawings and measurements of buildings in Copenhagen and royal castles and other interesting buildings in Denmark, with Danish, German and French text.

Frustrated by his losing assignments to Eigtved, he petitioned the king in 1747 for a new non-architectural position, but this was rejected.

In 1748 de Thurah was asked to assist on the building of a new spire on the Lambert van Haven designed Our Saviour’s ("vor Frelsers") Church in the Christianshavn district of Copenhagen. He chose a design inspired by the Sant’ivo della Sapienza church, he had seen in Rome many years before. The new design however was much more costly than king's original plan, and this led to a rivalry between de Thurah and Eigtved over the choice of building material. The king finally sided with de Thurah.

That same year de Thurah’s wife died.

He married again on January 16, 1750, to Christiane Marie de Kiærskiold, heiress to Børglum Kloster. He felt overlooked and pressured by colleague Eigtved, and so he pulled back on his career. He moved out of Copenhagen to the estate at Børglum Kloster in Jutland with his wife.

de Thurah’s masterpiece, the ornate, spiral-staircased spire on Our Saviour’s Church topped with globe and figure, was completed in 1752, and can still be seen high-above Christianshavn to this day.

In 1753 after his retirement from the Engineering Corps he was named General Major. That same year he gave up his responsibility for royal buildings on Zealand, that being taken over by Nicolai Eigtved. In 1754 he was named General Building Master, while Eigtved took over as Royal Building Master.

The six year older Eigtved died that same year, causing de Thurah to be called back into service as the leading architect of the day.

de Thurah was assigned the completion of work in Eigtved’s Frederiksstad area around Amalienborg, including the last two palaces on the eastern side of the square, and in 1754-1758 he designed and built the four pavilions at Frederiks Hospital (now the Danish Museum of Applied Arts), which Eigtved had begun in 1752.

He also tried to get plans approved for the centerpiece of the Frederiksstad area—Frederik's Church ("Frederikskirken"), now known as "The Marble Church" ("Marmorkirken"). He wanted to build a stone dome in the style of Michaelangelo. The work eventually went to French neoclassical architect Nicolas-Henri Jardin.

Additionally he published illustrated books about Bornholm, Christiansø, Amager, Saltholm, and Samsø (1756-1758).

He died during the night September 5, 1759 in Copenhagen, and is buried in Trinity Church ("Trinitatiskirke").

A portrait of him by Swedish artist Johan Hörner is in the collection of the Frederiksborg Palace Museum.

de Thurah was a self-taught architect who learned much of what he knew by studying the inspiring buildings he saw on his travels outside Denmark between 1729-1731. He brought home the baroque style, which was then popular, but was quickly losing way to rococo. Throughout his life he maintained a loyalty to the baroque, even as the world around him continued to change and he lost work assignments to others who mastered the newer, more popular styles..

See also

* Baroque architecture

References

* [http://www.kid.dk/ KID Kunst Index Danmark (‘’Art Index Denmark’’)]
* [http://runeberg.org/dbl/ Danish Biographical Encyclopedia (‘’Dansk biografisk Leksikion’’)]


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