- Hopperstad stave church
Infobox religious building
building_name = Hopperstad stave church
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location = Vikøyri,Vik municipality,Sogn og Fjordane county,Norway
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religious_affiliation =Church of Norway
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status = Church
functional_status = Preserved
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architecture = yes
architect = Original architect unknown; 19th-century reconstruction byPeter Andreas Blix
architecture_type =Stave church
architecture_style = Romanesque and Gothic
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year_completed = "c."1100
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materials =Timber Hopperstad stave church (Hopperstad Stavkyrkje) is a
stave church near Vikøyri inVik municipality,Sogn og Fjordane county,Norway .The stave church is assumed to have been built around 1130 and still stands at its original location. The church is owned by
Fortidsminneforeningen .In 1997 a series of samples from the logs were collected for dendrochronological dating of the church. A total of seven samples produced an estimate for the construction ranging from 1034 to 1116 and resulted in no definite conclusion. The only possible conclusion is that this is one of the oldest stave churches still standing.
History
About 700 years after its construction the church was abandoned and its exterior stripped. The church was in very poor condition for many years until the
Society for the Preservation of Norwegian Ancient Monuments purchased the building in 1880. Using the Borgund stave church as a model, architectPeter Andreas Blix reconstructed the church between 1884 and 1891, restoring its 17th-century painted decor to what was assumed to be the original medieval appearance. During the reconstruction carved sections were found beneath the floor which indicates that the new church replaced an older church, which was probably built in the latter half of the 11th century.The church had not undergone any major changes until the 17th century. At that time the nave was lengthened to the west, and a bell-tower was added above the new extension. To the east a log section was added, and a new vestibule to the south with its own entrance.
The largest addition came to the north with a log construction, named the new church ("nykirken"). The constructions were finalized in the 18th century, but then removed in around 1875. There are no known images of the interior from this time, but a story written by the priest "Niels Dahl", who is assumed to have visited the church in 1824, describes the interior.
The present building
The church is a triple-nave stave church of what is known as the Borgund-type. It has three portals, and the western portal is an excellent example of middle age wood carving. The motifs are of a romance character, often associated with European influence. The
nave is a raised central room with an aisle around it, and the choir is apsidal and narrower than the nave.The church contains an altar dedicated to the Virgin Mary, and 14th-century
ciborium with abaldachin on the north side. The ciborium has four sculptured heads, that of Christ with a halo, a queen, a king, and a monk. The roof of the baldachin bears a painting of the birth of Christ.References
*Eva Valebrokk og Thomas Thiis-Evensen: "Levende fortid. De utrolige stavkirkene." – Boksenteret – ISBN 82-7683-024-2, — in Norwegian
External links
* [http://www.stavkirke.org/stavkirker/hopperstad.html Hopperstad stave church in Stavkirke.org] — in Norwegian
* [http://www.fortidsminneforeningen.no/eiendom/hopper.htm Hopperstad stave church in Fortidsminneforeningen] — in Norwegian
* [http://www.stavechurch.com Fortidsminneforeninga's stave church pages] — in Norwegian (there are also English and German pages)
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