When the
prince-electoral family of Brandenburg, the Berlin-based
Hohenzollern, converted from
Lutheranism to
Calvinism (in German usually: Reformed Church; in English mostly: Presbyterian church) in 1613, all parish churches of Berlin, then under the
patronage and
advowson of the Lutheran city council, remained Lutheran. So, only the
Cölln Palace and Collegiate Church, the
court church, was dedicated as a Reformed place of worship. However, the number of ordinary German-speaking Berliners of Reformed denomination (i.e., churchgoers not employed at or belonging to the court) grew, mainly by immigration, and a separate
parochial church for them in addition to the Palace Reformed Church was needed. Parochialkirche was the first and initially the only Reformed church for prevailingly ordinary Reformed congregants in Berlin, thus the undifferentiated name. As a Reformed church building, Parochialkirche is not dedicated or even consecrated to any
patron saint. The church was erected in Klosterstraße at the corner with Freier Fahrweg (renamed Parochialstraße in 1862) because the sites along Klosterstraße then formed a
prince-electoral immunity district (kurfürstliche Freiheit) not under the legislation of the Lutheran city council, thus circumventing the council's objection against its construction. ==History==