Plans for a second Protestant church, after the
Marktkirche, date back to 1837, but were not realised until decades later, due to the two wars (
Austro-Prussian War and
Franco-Prussian War) that Prussia had to fight between 1866 and 1871. Building began in 1876, and was completed in 1879. The Protestant Bergkirche was built in
Gothic revival style, designed by
Johannes Otzen who would write the
Wiesbadener Programm. The building process was supervised by
Hans Grisebach. It was named Bergkirche because it was built on a high plateau within Wiesbaden's inner city, and the surrounding quarter is named after the church. The steeple, with a slate roof, dominates the area. The Wiesbadener Programm was written by Otzen and
Emil Veesenmeyer, minister of the Bergkirche, in 1891, aiming at an unobstructed view from every seat in the church to the combined location of altar, pulpit and organ. The third Protestant church in Wiesbaden, the
Ringkirche, followed this program, completed in 1894 after Otzen's design, as well as the fourth church, the
Lutherkirche, opened in 1911. == Architecture ==