hekk; kas ühelt või mõlemalt poolt arkaadistikuks avanev käik, vrdl galerii ja kolonnaadiga. Arts&Crafts (< ingl. 'kunst ja käsitöö') liikumine 19. saj lõpu Inglismaal, millega väärtustati kunsti, loodust, käsitööd ja ajalugu. avenüü lai ja sirge puude, skulptuuride vms servatud tee, millel on tavaliselt monumentaalne peamotiiv (pr. point de vue); ka teatud iseloomuga tänav; peatänav. bagh islami aed. balustraad (pr. balustrade) käsipuuga vm ühendatud balustrite reast koosnev rinnatis, eriti rõdude ja balkonite avakülgedel, veekogude ääres jm. Baluster - lühike, altpoolt või keskelt tüsedam profileeritud sambake, tulband. barokkstiil 16. saj lõpul itaalia hilisrenessansist võrsunud ja 18. saj keskpaigani Euroopas valitsenud kunstistiil, mida iseloomustavad dekoratiivne toredus, kaunistusmotiivide kuhjamine, maalilisus, valguse ja varju kontrastimine.
councillors. Also some famous guests have stayed in the house, such as the 15th century artist Bernt Notke from Lübeck and later the Russian Czar Peter I. Legend has it that the czar planted the two lime trees growing in front of the house. 8 Numerous Baroque features of interior design have been later added to to the originally Gothic house, including a mythological painted ceiling to the Rape of Europa theme. The main stairs with a balustrade and a small portrait gallery of the Hueck family (actually copies) enhance the cosy diele. Tallinn City Museum has a model reconstructing the original appearance of the building. With reference to Hueck House, there were a number of spirit and ghost stories and also legends in the Middle Ages. Most of the stories are about the spirit of a monk who was immured in the house and
decorated with carvings and paintings and one of the mos valuable examples of medieval clerical art in Estonia. The church was also fitted with numerous side altars before the reformation. P o r g a s s a a r, Kristina; A l j a s, Eva-Grete; K u u s k e m a a, Jüri. Tallinn: Medieval capital. Tallinn: PhotoTour Other noteworthy items are the 17 th century pulpit and the carved wooden figures of the triumphal arch together with the crucifix, the decoration of the balustrade of the balcony, the 17th- century epitaphs to Bartholomeus Rottert and Michael Prosa, as well as the church chandeliers. The earliest reports of the Holy Ghost Church organ date back to 1511. The present organ was made by organ builder August Artur Terkmann in Tallinn in 1929. Among the older churches in Tallinn, the Holy Ghost Church has been most closely linked to the Estonians, even including claims by some historians that the church had been