Grönby Church

Grönby Church (Swedish: Grönby kyrka) is a medieval church in Grönby, Trelleborg Municipality, in the province of Skåne, Sweden.

Grönby Church
Grönby kyrka
Grönby Church
Grönby Church
Grönby Church
55°26′35″N 13°21′20″E
CountrySweden
DenominationChurch of Sweden
Administration
DioceseLund

History

Grönby Church was built circa 1200. It was enlarged in the 14th century, and the tower was also built later during the Middle Ages. A major enlargement of the church was made in the 1870s to designs by Carl Georg Brunius. Brunius replaced the medieval choir with a larger one and two transepts. The pulpit and altarpiece of the church were made in the 19th century, but the baptismal font is original, dating from the construction period of the church.[1] A medieval terracotta medallion with a portrait of Saint Peter was discovered in the church attic in 1998 and is today again displayed in the church.[2]

Murals

The church also contains medieval murals, dating from the second half of the 14th century. The vaults of the nave are adorned with purely decorative paintings, and the easternmost vault of the nave also displays a depiction of Last Judgment. The church murals were rediscovered in the 1860s after having been covered with whitewash.[1]

gollark: My computers spend most of their boot time in UEFI, annoyingly enough.
gollark: Why not run your critical services under Linux with its generally faster boot?
gollark: Good for, I don't know, video editing and whatnot.
gollark: As I said though, I don't think it's usually the bottleneck and I do not think it would eke out more than a few seconds at most for boot.
gollark: Oh, they dropped the 970's prices? In any case other 1TB disks are available for maybe £80-£90 and NVMe ones for a little more.

References

  1. Wahlöö, Claes (2014). Skånes kyrkor 1050-1949 (in Swedish). Kävlinge: Domus Propria. p. 98. ISBN 978-91-637-5874-4.
  2. "Grönby kyrka". Church of Sweden. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.