Hueck, who a young monk had had a crush on. However, as Hueck had given his daughter to a rich Lübeck merchant, then the monk had stayed to wait for his love with "eternal fidelity and longing love". Although the legend is based on some historical facts, the truth has become distorted during centuries. 9 30 Lai Street The first reports of a small house date back to the 15th century. In 1495 the house became Hans Pawels house. Hans Pawels was the organizer of St Olaf's curch's Mary's Chapel's works. In the 18th century the house was rebuilt into a granary, but the two old adjacending doorways were retained in the southern part of the house. Thus, the building lost the characteristics of a dwelling house façade and interior. The current interior has been simplified. Some of the medieval residential structures still remain: furnace parts, traces of the old ceilings, niches, etc
The height of the central nave was 31 metres, the height of the stone tower 57 metres, while the spire, completed in 1450, reached the height of 159 metres. The St. Olaf's Church was the tallest building of the world at that time. The present late Gothic St. Mary's Chapel was built at the beginning of the 16 th century immediately before the Reformation, which also broke off its completion. The cenotaph of the warden of the church and a supporter of the chapel building, Hans Pawels, is built in the chapel wall, bearing the inscription: ''What I have given away, remains with me; what I have owned has been lost for me; no one can consider himself too high for the human life passes like smoke.'' The Lutheran reformation in Tallinn started from St. Olaf's Church. The new religious movement seized the masses and drove them against the Religious fervour turned into a devastating force, which in turn ended up as iconoclastic movement. Thus