This church is very related to the 17th century greatest German composer Heinrich Schutz. He is buried in this church. Of course it is the old one. It is a pity that the new church was destroyed. Less than 40 years after Martin Luther died, Schutz was born. He gave great artistic achievement to German Protestant church music. Regarding Xutz, he actually started studying law and was excavated by Earl Hesse-Kassel when he was 13 years old as a church choir singer, funding his research in different music fields. In 1609 he went to Venice, where he spent three years studying music. A gifted musician, he also devoted all of his gifts to church music: 500 works that he passed down almost all based on the Luther Bible. The Seven Words of Jesus Christ's End of the Dead, written in 1645, is arguably one of his best works, but unfortunately it was not performed until 1873, when it was published.