Stave church
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A stave church is a medieval wooden church with a post and beam construction related to timber framing. The wall frames are filled with vertical planks. The load-bearing posts (stavr in Old Norse) have lent their name to the building technique. Related church types are post church and churches with palisade walls. Both will be briefly mentioned here. The majority of existing stave churches are found in Norway, but related church types were once common all over Northwestern Europe.
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[edit] Construction
Archaeological excavations have shown that stave churches, best represented today by the Borgund stave church, descend from palisade constructions and later churches with earth-bound posts.
The palisade constructions are known from buildings from the Viking era. Logs were split in two halves, rammed into the ground and given a roof. This was a simple construction yet very strong. If set in gravel the wall could last for decades, even centuries. Remains of buildings of this type are found over much of Europe. An archaeological excavation in Lund uncovered the post holes of several such churches.
In later churches the walls were supported by sills, leaving only the corner posts earth-bound. Such churches are easy to spot at archaeological sites as they leave very distinct holes where the posts were once placed. Sometimes the remains are even preserved, which makes it possible to give a very good dating of the church building. Under Urnes stave church remains have been found of two such churches, with Christian graves discovered below the oldest church.
The next phase resulted from the observation that earth-bound posts are susceptible to humidity, which will cause them to rot away over time. To prevent this the posts were placed on top of large stones, significantly increasing their lifespan. The stave church in Røldal is believed to be of this type.
In still later churches, the posts were set on a raised sill frame, resting on stone foundations. This is the stave church in its most mature form.
It is now common to group the churches into two categories; the first without free-standing posts, often referred to as Type A, and the other with a raised roof and with free-standing internal posts, usually termed Type B.
Those with the raised roof, Type B, are often further divided in two subgroups; the Kaupanger group with a whole arcade row of posts and intermediate posts along the sides and details mimicking stone like capital. These churches give an impression of a basilica.
The other subgroup is the Borgund group. These churches have cross braces joining upper and lower string beams and the posts, forming a very rigid interconnection, and resembling the triforium of stone basilicas. This makes it possible to omit the freestanding lower part of intermediate posts. In some churches in Valdres, only the four corner posts have been retained (see image of Lomen stave church).
Many stave churches had or still have outer galleries running around the whole perimeter, loosely connected to the plank walls. They probably served to protect the church from a harsh climate, and for processions.
[edit] Single nave church, Type A
At the base of Type A churches there are four heavy sill beams on a low foundation of stones. These are interconnected in the corner notch, forming a rigid sill frame. The corner posts or staves (stavene) are cross-cut at the lower end and fit over the corner notches and cover them, thereby protecting them from moisture.
On top of the sill beam is a groove, into which the lower ends of the wall planks (veggtilene) fit. The last wall plank wedge-shaped and rammed into place. When the wall is filled in with planks, the frame is completed by a wall plate (stavlægje) with a groove on the bottom side, holding the top ends of the wall planks. The whole structure consists of frames — a sill frame resting on the stone foundation, and the four wall frames made up of sills, corner posts and wall plate.
The wall plates support the roof trusses, consisting of a pair of principal rafters and an additional pair of intersecting "scissor rafters". For lateral bracing, additional wooden brackets (bueknær) are inserted between the rafters.
Every piece is locked into position by other pieces, making for a very rigid construction. Yet all points otherwise susceptible to the harsh weather is covered.
- The single nave church has a square nave and a narrower square choir. This type of stave church was common at the beginning of the 12th century.
- The long church, (Langkirke), has a rectangular plan with nave and choir of the same width. The nave will usualle take up two thirds of the whole length. This type was common at the end of 13th century.
- Center post church, (Midtmastkirke) has a single central post reaching all the way up and connected with the roof construction. But the roof is a simple hipped one, without the raised central part of the Type B churches. This variation on the common type of church in Numedal and Hallingdal, dated to around 1200.
Single nave churches in Norway: Grip, Haltdalen, Undredal, Hedal, Reinli, Eidsborg, Rollag, Uvdal, Nore, Høyjord, Røldal and Garmo.
The only remaining church in Sweden, in Hedared, is of this type and shows similarities with the one from Haltdalen.
[edit] Church with a raised roof, Type B
On the stone foundation four huge beams (grunnstokker) are placed like a # sign, their ends protruding 1-2 metres from the notches where they intersect. The ends of these beams support the sills of the outer walls, forming a separate horizontal frame. The tall internal posts are placed on the internal frame of large beams, and carry the main roof above the central space nave (skip). On the outer frame of sills rest the main wall planks (veggtiler), carrying the roof over the pentice or aisles (omgang) surrounding the central space. The roof thus tapers down in two steps, as in a basilica.
The tall internal posts (staver) are interconnected with brackets (bueknær), and also connected to the outer walls with aisle rafters, creating a laterally rigid construction. Closer to the top of the posts (staver) shorter sills inserted between them support the upper wall (tilevegg). On top of the posts wall plates (stavlægjer) support the roof trusses, similar to those of the single nave churches.
The Kaupanger group consists of: Kaupanger, Urnes, Hopperstad and Lom.
The Borgund group consists of: Borgund, Gol, Hegge, Høre (Hurum), Lomen, Ringebu and Øye.
This form of church can also be recognized from the holes which remain from earlier earth-bound post churches built on the same sites. Little is known about what these older churches actually looked like, or how they were constructed, as they were all destroyed or replaced many centuries ago.
[edit] History
Stave churches were once common in Northern Europe. In Norway alone a total of about 1000 churches are believed to have been built, although more recent research has adjusted this number upwards and it is now assumed to have been closer to 2000 [1]. The number of stave churches constructed in Sweden and the United Kingdom is unknown.
Some believe they were the first type of church to be constructed in Scandinavia; however, there existed an even older type called post churches, although the difference between the two is very small. A stave church has a lower construction set on a frame, whereas a post church has earth-bound posts. In Sweden, the stave churches were considered to be obsolete in the Middle Ages and were replaced. In Norway, they were not replaced as quickly as they were in Sweden and England. Many stave churches survived until the 19th century, when a substantial number were destroyed.
In Norway, 28 historical stave churches¹ remain standing. There are also a number of places where there have been archaeological surveys uncovering older post churches. There are also some newer stave churches at various locations.
In Denmark, traces of post churches have been found at several locations, and there are also parts still in existence from some of them. For example from Nørre Hørning stave church on Jutland an old stavlægje with a dragon head still exists. Marks created by several old post churches have also been found at the old stone church in Jelling.
In Sweden there is a medieval stave church, the Hedared stave church constructed c. 1500, at the same location as a previous older stave church. The old stories about Skaga stave church are also very interesting, although the church now at Skaga is a replica of the old church. Other notable places are Maria Minor church in Lund with its traces of a post church with palisades, and some old parts of Hemse stave church on Gotland. In Skåne alone there were around 300 churches when Adam of Bremen visited Denmark in the first half of the 11th century, how many of those were stave churches or post churches is unknown.
In England, there is one much debated church of Saxon origin, and the debate is whether this is a stave church or if it predates stave churches. This is the Greensted Church in Essex. General consensus is to categorize it as Saxon [A]. There is also another church in England which bears similarities to stave churches, this is the medieval stone church of St. Mary in Kilpeck in Herefordshire. This church features a number of dragon heads.
In Germany, there is one stone church with a motif depicting a dragon similar to the ones often seen on Norwegian stave churches, and on a remaining artifact from Denmark and also from Gotland. Whether this decoration can be attributed to cultural similarities or whether it indicates similar construction methods in Germany has sparked much controversy.
There is some historical evidence suggesting that the stave churches were built upon old Norse religious ground. In other cases there is evidence of much older churches built on the same ground, often the stones are still left in the holes created by the posts of an older post church, and under Urnes stave church there have even been discovered remains of two such earlier post churches. The old portal from one of these churches is believed to be the one built into the northern wall of the current church. Newer research indicates thus that Christianity was introduced into Norway much earlier than was previously assumed.
[edit] Architecture and decoration
Even though the wooden churches had structural differences, they give a recognizable general impression. Formal differences may hide common features of their planning; while apparently similar buildings may turn out to have their structural elements organized completely differently. Despite this, certain basic principles must have been common to all types of building.
Basic geometrical figures, numbers that were easy to work with, one or just a few length units and simple ratios, and perhaps proportions as well were among the theoretical aids all builders inherited. The specialist was the man who knew a particular type of building so well that he could systematize its elements in a slightly different way from what was the case in the buildings known hitherto, thus carrying developments a stage further.
Decoration of stave churches feature an intriguing combination of Christian designs intermixed with what is often assumed to be pre-Christian Viking motifs, such as the interwoven dragon motifs. This has led people to believe they must have been in a tradition of heathen worship, yet they have little in common with art from previous centuries. A closer study reveals the clear religious underpinning, the fight between good and evil, and shows how the new beliefs have been victorious over the ancient beliefs. There are several churches where figures from the old Norse mythology are depicted, often entangled or stylized, and thus the victory is on display.
[edit] Dating of churches
The dating of such buildings may be done in different ways, by historical records, inscriptions, by stylistic means on construction details or ornaments, dendrochronology and radiocarbon dating. Often historical records or inscriptions will point to a year when the church is known to have existed. Archaeological excavations can yield finds which can provide relative dating for the structure, whereas absolute dating methods such as radiocarbon dating and dendrochronology can provide a more exact date.
[edit] The old stave churches
- Borgund stave church¹, Sogn og Fjordane, — end of the 12th century
- Eidsborg stave church¹, Telemark, — the middle of the 13th century
- Flesberg stave church¹ in Flesberg, Buskerud, built around 1200
- Fåvang stave church in Ringebu, Oppland, rebuilt in 1630 (two old churches rebuilt as one)
- Garmo stave church¹, Oppland, — around 1150
- Gol stave church¹ in Gol (now at Norsk Folkemuseum), Buskerud, built 1212
- Grip stave church¹, Møre og Romsdal, second half of the 15th century
- Haltdalen stave church¹, Sør-Trøndelag, — 1170 - 1179
- Hedal stave church¹, Oppland, — the second half of the 12th century
- Heddal stave church¹, Telemark, — the beginning of the 13th century
- Hegge stave church¹, Oppland, — 1216
- Hopperstad stave church¹, Sogn og Fjordane, — 1140
- Høre stave church¹, Oppland, — 1180
- Høyjord stave church¹, Vestfold, — second half of the 12th century
- Kaupanger stave church¹, Sogn og Fjordane, — 1190
- Kvernes stave church¹, Møre og Romsdal, — second half of the 14th century
- Lomen stave church¹, Oppland, — 1179
- Lom stave church¹, Oppland, — second half of the 12th century
- Nore stave church¹ in Nore og Uvdal, Buskerud, built 1167
- Øye stave church¹, Oppland, — second half of the 12th century
- Reinli stave church¹, Oppland, — 1190
- Ringebu stave church¹, Oppland, — the first quarter of the 13th century
- Rollag stave church¹ in Rollag, Buskerud, built second half of the 12th century
- Rødven stave church¹, Møre og Romsdal, — around 1200
- Røldal stave church¹, Hordaland, — first half of the 13th century (could be a post church)
- Torpo stave church¹ in Ål, Buskerud, built 1192
- Undredal stave church¹, Sogn og Fjordane, — the middle of the 12th century
- Urnes stave church¹, Sogn og Fjordane, — first half of the 12th century (On UNESCO’s World Heritage List)
- Uvdal stave church¹ in Andebu, Buskerud, built 1168
- Vang stave church moved to Poland (no longer on the official list due to the reconstruction)
- Hedared stave church in Sweden, — ca 1500 on the site of an earlier stave church (not on the official Norwegian list)
- Greensted church, — 845 (a church of Saxon origin, sharing a lot of construction details with stave churches)
[edit] Later stave churches and replicas
Stave churches are a very popular phenomenon and several are built or rebuilt around the world. The two most copied are Borgund and Hedared, with some variations, and sometimes with adoptions to add elements from known stave churches from the area. In other places they are of a more free form, and built for display.
- Skaga stave church in Töreboda, Västra Götaland county, built in the 12th century, torn down in the 19th century, rebuilt in the 1950s, burnt down, and rebuilt again in 2001
- Saint Olaf's chapel in Hardemo, Svealand, built 1766 - 1767
- Heimaey stave church at Heimaey, Vestmannaeyjar, built 2000
- Black Hills stave church in Rapid City, South Dakota, USA
- Boynton Chapel at Bjorklunden, Door County, Wisconsin, USA
- Hjemkomst Center stave church in Moorhead, Minnesota, USA
- Trinity Lutheran Church's at Washington Island, Wisconsin, USA
- Fantoft stave church, — around 1150, arsoned 1992 and rebuilt in 1997 (no longer on the official list)
- Haltdalen stave church (replica), — copy of the old church, now at Sverresborg museum
- Gol stave church (replica), — replica erected in the 1990s at another (improbable) site in the community from which Gol stave church was translocated in the 1880s.
- Gustav Adolf stave church in Hahnenklee, Harz landscape, Germany
[edit] Archaeological sites and dismantled churches
Many stave churches are now long gone.
- Thorarinsstadir archaeological excavation in Seyðisfjörður, east Iceland (Post church which predates stave church)
- Hakastein church, Skien. Archaeological excavation of post church - constructed between 1010-1040.
- St.Thomas Church, Filefjell
- Vågå stave church (portal from an old church)
- Maria Minor church in Lund built around 1060
[edit] See also
- Wooden Churches of Maramureş — (not stave churches)
- Architecture of Norway
[edit] References
- Directorate for Cultural Heritage, Stave Churches
- Anker, Peter, Stavkirkene, Deres egenart og historie, Oslo 1997, ISBN 82-02-15978-4
- Mereth Lindgren, Louise Lydberg, Birgitta Sandstrøm and Anna Greta Waklberg, Svensk Konsthistoria, Kristianstad 2002, ISBN 91-87896-52-4
- Bugge, Gunnar og Mezzanotte, Bernardino, Stavkirker, Oslo 1993, ISBN 82-504-2072-1
- Bugge, Gunnar, Stavkirkene i Norge, Oslo 1981, ISBN 82-09-01890-6
- Hohler, Erla Bergendahl, Norwegian Stave Church Sculpture, volume 1-2 Oslo 1999,ISBN 82-00-12748-6
- Hauglid, Roar, Norske Stavkirker, Oslo 1973, multipart work
- Lagerlöf, Erland and Svahnström, Gunnar, Gotlands Kyrkor, Kristianstad 1991 ISBN 91-29-61598-4
- Elstad, Hallgeir, Dei norske stavkyrkjene - ei innføring, Faculty of Theology, University of Oslo, curriculum 2002
- Note that the author Roar Hauglid has an enormous production and this (7) is just one of several with similar titles. Other books from the author include: Norwegische Stabkirchen, Oslo 1970, ISBN 82-09-00938-9 and Norwegian stave churches, Oslo 1970
[edit] Footnote
¹ A semi-official list of Norwegian stave churches which comply to specific criteria
- This list is a rough guide to say which one is in a shape to be used as a reference for research purposes
[edit] External links
- The stave churches of Norway
- Stave Church - Medieval Wooden Churches in Norway
- Research in Medieval, Norwegian Wooden Churches, Relevance of Available Sources
- From Vitruvius to Alberti: Systematic Thinking in medieval church design
- The "Inverse design problem" in Medieval Wooden Churches of Norway
- Dendrochronology
- Animals in the middel ages from the Medieval Bestiary
- Stavkyrkor from Historiska Världer — in Swedish
- The Norwegian Medieval Stave Church — partly in Norwegian, English and Deutch