Old Aker Church

Old Aker Church (Norwegian: Gamle Aker kirke) is a medieval era church located in Oslo, Norway. An active parish, the church is the oldest existing building in Oslo.[1] The church is surrounded by Old Aker Cemetery.

Old Aker Church
Gamle Aker kirke
Old Aker Church, South side
South side of the church
TypeChurch
StatusAutomatically protected
CountyOslo
MunicipalityOslo
Coordinates59.9237°N 10.7471°E / 59.9237; 10.7471
Year builtMiddle Ages
ID84226
Telthusbakken with Gamle Aker kirke
Edvard Munch (1880)

History

Old Aker Church was built as a three-naved Romanesque style basilica and constructed from limestone. It is believed to have been erected by King Olav Kyrre in 1080 as a church for all of Vingulmark, the historic area surrounding Oslo. The grounds of Old Aker Church were originally likely the former site of the regional thing during the pre-Christian period.[2]

The oldest part of the surrounding churchyard dates back to the 12th century. The church has been pillaged and ravaged by fire several times. After a lightning strike and fire during 1703, the tower and church bells as well as the entire inventory were destroyed. The exterior was restored by architects Heinrich Ernst Schirmer and Wilhelm von Hanno in 1861. Interior restoration during the period 1950–1955 included removal of plaster on brick walls and restoration of the Baroque style furnishings.[3][4]

The church sits on top of Telthusbakken and is located centrally in the borough of St. Hanshaugen. It is surrounded by an old graveyard and a stone wall. The church has a baroque pulpit and baptismal font from 1715. The tower is built in 1861. Most of the buildings in the area are from the 1880s, with the addition of some apartment blocks from the 1930s. Gustav Jensen was appointed a curate at the church in 1874. Knud Karl Krogh-Tonning was parish priest at the church from 1886 to 1900.[5][6]

The church was built over the former site of the Akerberg mines (Akersberg gruve), an ancient silver mine which was in use since the early Viking era. The mines are mentioned in the 1170 Historia Norvegiae. The existence of these former mines must have been the inspiration for a number of local stories about the church having hidden silver treasures and even dungeons with dragons.[7] [8][9]

With the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany during the Second World War in April 1940, King Haakon VII and his family left for England on the British cruiser HMS Glasgow, not knowing when or even if they would return. On 19 April 1940, the coffin of the king's late wife Queen Maud of Norway, who had died unexpectedly in London in 1938, was moved in secret to Old Aker Church, on the instructions of Eivind Josef Berggrav, Bishop of Oslo and Primate of the Church of Norway, and Hofmarschall Peter Broch. Her body was left undiscovered in the crypt, covered in a hidden tomb, until 1949, when her remains were finally interred in the Royal Mausoleum at Akershus Castle.[10]

Old Aker Cemetery

Old Aker Cemetery (Norwegian: Gamle Aker kirkegård) is the cemetery of Old Aker Church. Like the church, the cemetery dates back to the Middle Ages. The cemetery is located adjacent to the newer Cemetery of Our Saviour, which was established in 1808.[11] Several notable people are interred in the cemetery.[12]

Notable interments

References

  1. Aker Kirke (Den Norske Kirke)
  2. og kirke (Akers Avis Groruddalen)
  3. Ole Petter Bjerkek. "Heinrich Ernst Schirmer". Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved October 1, 2016.
  4. Trond Indahl. "Wilhelm Von Hanno". Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved October 1, 2016.
  5. Gamle Aker Kirke (Frommers.com)
  6. Knut Are Tvedt. "St. Hanshaugen". Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved October 1, 2016.
  7. Rolv Magne Dahl. "Akersberg gruve". Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved October 1, 2016.
  8. "Gamle Aker – Akersberget gruver". Riksantikvaren. Retrieved October 1, 2016.
  9. Treasure at the base of the Old Aker Church Archived 2007-01-14 at the Wayback Machine En skatt ved foten av Gamle Aker kirke University of Oslo
  10. "Queen Maud of Norway | the secret of the queen's coffin". 8 August 2016.
  11. Gamle Aker kirkegård
  12. Her hviler: kjente personer på kirkegårdene i Oslo sentrum, pp. 132–141
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