Evangelische Kirche in Hessen und Nassau | |
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Abbreviation | EKHN |
Type | Regional Church, member of the Protestant Church in Germany |
Classification | Protestant |
Orientation | United Protestant (Lutheran & Reformed) |
Director | Kirchenpräsident Volker Jung |
Associations | Union Evangelischer Kirchen, Reformed Alliance |
Region | 13.358,77 km² in southern Hesse, parts of Rhineland-Palatinate (Germany) |
Headquarters | Darmstadt |
Origin | 1933 |
Merger of | Protestant Churches of Hesse, Nassau and Frankfurt |
Members | 1,446,971 (2020) 27,3% of total population[1] |
Official website | www |
The Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau (German: Evangelische Kirche in Hessen und Nassau, EKHN) is a United Protestant church body in the German federal states of Hesse and Rhineland-Palatinate. There is no bishop and therefore no cathedral. One of its most prominent churches is Katharinenkirche in Frankfurt am Main.
Dating back to the union in the Duchy of Nassau in August 1817, before the Prussian Union of September 1817, it is the first United and uniting church in the world. The EKHN is a full member of the Protestant Church in Germany (EKD), and is based on the teachings brought forward by Martin Luther during the Reformation. The Church President is Volker Jung (since 2009). It is a united church, combining both Calvinist and Lutheran traditions. Member of the Reformed Alliance in Germany.[2] The Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau is one of 20 churches in the EKD, has 1,446,971 members in 1,184 parishes (December, 2020). The territory of the EKHN includes the territories of the former People's State of Hesse and the Prussian Wiesbaden Region, which now form the southern and western part of the German federal state of Hesse and portions of the German federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate (Rhenish Hesse). It's the most important Protestant denomination in this area. The church is a member of the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe.