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Friedrich Weigle (the younger)

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Friedrich Weigle (9 September 1882 – 25 September 1958) was a German organ builder.

Together with his brothers, he took over the workshop of his father Friedrich Weigle in 1906. From 1937, he was the sole owner of the company. In 1908, in cooperation with the harmonium building company J. & P. Schiedmayer, Weigle developed the so-called Parabrahm-Orgel [de], which has an integrated harmonium as a supplement to a usual pipe organ. The only instrument of this type preserved today is in Eichwalde near Berlin.

List of works (selection)[edit]

The size of the instruments is indicated in the sixth column by the number of manuals and the number of sounding stops in the seventh column. A capital "P" stands for an independent pedal.

Year Opus Location Church Picture Manual Register Notes
1909 400 Seeshaupt Pfarrkirche St. Michael II/P 31 Original condition - restored in 2009.[1]
1912 Kell am See St. Bartholomäus II/P 21 pneumatic windlade [de]
1913 463 Altenkessel [de] St. Johannes Baptista II/P 13
1914 487 Legnica Liebfrauenkirche (today Kościół ewangelicki Marii Panny) III/P 46 Behind the front and including the few preserved pipes by Johann Michael Röder (1736)
1916–1917 Bottenhorn [de] Ev. Kirche II/P 26 pneumatic
1939 800 Leutkirch Pfarrkirche St. Maria of Schloss Zeil [de], main organ III/P 28 Using the older inventory
1926 Stuttgart-Süd [de] Neuapostolische Kirche II/P 25 after several conversions, today II/31

References[edit]

External links[edit]



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