Anga Church, Gotland

Anga Church
Anga kyrka
Anga Church, external view
Anga Church
Location on Gotland
57°28′49″N 18°42′23″E / 57.48033°N 18.70642°E / 57.48033; 18.70642Coordinates: 57°28′49″N 18°42′23″E / 57.48033°N 18.70642°E / 57.48033; 18.70642
Country Sweden
Denomination Church of Sweden
Previous denomination Catholic
Administration
Diocese Visby

Anga Church (Swedish: Anga kyrka) is a Romanesque church in Anga on the Swedish island of Gotland, in the Diocese of Visby.

History and architecture

The altarpiece of Anga Church (1370s)

Anga Church takes its name from a now vanished farmstead, mentioned in a runestone inscription at the end of the 11th century. The first church was probably built as a church for the large farm. During archaeological excavations carried out in 1946–1947, traces of burnt wood were found, indicating that the first church may have been a stave church.[1]

The presently visible Romanesque church was built during the 13th century.[2] Thanks to dendrochronological investigations of still intact wooden details, the church can be dated quite precisely. The choir and apse were built circa 1215, and are the oldest parts of the church. The nave dates from 1250 and the tower from 1265.[1]

The church is one of the most well-preserved Romanesque churches on Gotland, and gives a good impression of how most of the churches on the island might once have looked. The interior is notable for its rich decoration in the form of frescos. The frescos date from two periods, the oldest ones from the end of the 13th century. These are mostly ornamental, and unusual in that they are signed by the artist, a painter named Halvard. From the same time dates a runic inscription in Old Gutnish, which tells the name of the farmers of the parish who contributed oxen and day's works to the construction of the church, showing that the building of the church was a communal undertaking. A later set of frescos depict the Passion of Christ together with legends of saints, and were made during the middle of the 15th century.[1][2]

The church used to house medieval wooden sculptures, of which most are today at the Museum of Gotland in Visby. Still in the church is the altarpiece, dating from the 1370s, and the triumphal cross from the 15th century.[1] There is also a gravestone in the choir from the 13th century, with a runic inscription.[2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Andrén, Anders (2011). Det Medeltida Gotland. En arkeologisk guidebok (in Swedish). Lund: Historiska Media. pp. 187–188. ISBN 978-91-85873-83-8.
  2. 1 2 3 Lagerlöf, Erland (1973). Lagerlöf, Erland, ed. Gotlands kyrkor (in Swedish). Uddevalla: Rabén & Sjögren. pp. 92–95. ISBN 9129410355.

Further reading

  • Roosval, Johnny; Lagerlöf, Erland (1959). Anga kyrka (PDF) (Summary in English). Sveriges kyrkor, konsthistoriskt inventarium (in Swedish). IV, 4. Stockholm: Generalstabens Litografiska Anstalts Förlag. pp. 530–592. Retrieved 21 October 2014.
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