Norways Stave Churches
Norways Stave Churches
Norways Stave Churches
Norway's
Stave Churches
Nearly 800years ago. these wooden houses of
worship rose from the dying embers ofthe Viking age with
the first sparks of Christianity in Scandinavia.
would not rot. Many stave churches those heads of laughing Viking gods
were entirely surrounded at ground carved on the top of the staves! No
level by outward-facing cloistered theory is perfect.
porches which created the opposite There are 28 stave churches left in
effect of a Spanish cloister, which Norway. Even for the general trav-
faces inward on a courtyard. This eler, most of them are worth seeing.
porch sheltered from the inclement The most accessible is the Gol stave
weather lepers and other socially church, which is exhibited at the
unacceptable people who could still Norwegian Folk Museum in Oslo. If
listen to the service through smgdl you go to Bergen, you can see the
holes in the walls. Fantoft stave church, which was
The church was entered through a moved from Fortun on the Sogne-
"weapons porch," where all those fjord. This is one of Norway's best
who attended had to leave their wea- stave churches, but it loses a little
pons. The entry from the porch into bit of its atmosphere because it has
the church itself was decorated by been removed from its original set-
portals containing elaborately ting. Those which have been pre-
carved scenes depicting reptiles and served where they were built are the
monsters intertwined in eternal most impressive.
combat or legends from Viking my- Valdres, the district just eastover
thology. The windowless interior of the mountains from Sogn, has five
the church itself was presumably small stave churches. There is a
lighted by enough candles so that good story connected with one of
the worsldpers could see the fittings them, the Hedalen church. It seems
and paintings, but many stave The door to the outside porch oftheNore that the surrounding district had
church more properly belongs to a bell been depopulated by the plague; but
house or stabbur is torage bin} on an 18th- one day a hunter, who had wandered
century Telemark farm. It is trimmed far afield in search of game, saw an
with slanting strips of wood painted animal standing near a large
alternately red and white. The interior, blackberry thicket. He notched an
decorated with wild rosepainting of fan- arrow into bis bow and fired it at the
ciful design and unusual coloring, gives animal, but the animal bolted before
an odd impression because some of the
wall boards have slipped during set- the arrow reached it. The arrow dis-
tling, throwing the decorative scheme appeared into the thicket and quick-
outoflineinseveralplaces,Likesomany ly produced a weird, resonantly me-
of the stave churches still serving tallic sound. When the frightened
parishes, Nore has been enlarged and hunter got up the nerve to investi-
had windows added. However, its es- gate, he found that his arrow had hit
sential stave construction is still visible, the bell in the belfry of a stave
anditispossibly thequaintestchurchin chiu-ch which had been covered by
Norway. the thicket. Upon further investiga-
tion, he found that a bear lived in the
church. He killed it and slept in the
churches caught fire and burned to church that night. Presumably, the
the ground because of them. The land in the area was resettled soon
whole effect is weird, definitely from afterward.
another time, when death was much
more easily accepted than it is now. A few miles west of Kongsberg, in
One authority has suggested that the south of Norway, is the largest
the church exterior, with its scaly, stave church of all, theHeddal stave
reptilian appearance and the dragon church. The surroundingparish was
Most of Norway's stave churches were heads decorating some of its gables, especially prosperous and so tbe
built between 1200 and 1300, a period of was meant to depict for the Viking people could afford a large stave
great stability and prosperity for the worshiper the closeness of danger church, which was therefore also
country. As during so many positive and death to his whole life. In the able to serve longer as a parish
times in history, the art and architecture weapons porch, the worshiper could church without being altered. As a
of this time shows an almost Baroque look at the carved portals and be re- result, it has come down to the pres-
elaboration. Depicted also is a clear minded again of life's dangers while ent time largely in its original state;
struggle between Christian and pagan he divested himself of liis weapons. the church features an impressive,
elements:Dragon heads andcrosses dec- Upon entering the church, he was multi-roofed exterior, a fine exterior
orate alternate gables; entrance portals transformed into a spiritual world of cloister porch, impressive entrance
are carved with intertwining mythical eery candlelight, crucifixes, paint- portals and a large, well-lighted
depictions alongside medieval cruci- ings and Christian worship, the so- interior complete with many orig-
fixes and statues of Christian saints, and lution to the problems posed by the inal fittings, including a carved
laughing Viking gods look downonpain-
tings of scenes from the Bible.
exterior. But yet there were still Continued on following page
114 THE SATURDAY EVENING POST Jan./Feb. '80