Arninge Church Explained

Denomination:Church of Denmark
Country:Denmark
Location:Arninge, Lolland
Church Name:Arninge Church
Native Name:Arninge Kirke
Native Name Lang:Danish
Year Completed:ca. 1250
Parish:Arninge Sogn
Deanery:Lolland Vestre Provsti
Diocese:Diocese of Lolland–Falster
Earlydedication:Mary, mother of Jesus
Architectural Type:Romanesque architecture, Gothic architecture

Arninge Church is a Late Romanesque church in the little village of Arninge, some 8km (05miles) south of Nakskov on the Danish island of Lolland. Built of red brick in the 13th century, it has an intricately carved auricular altarpiece created by Henrik Werner in 1644.[1]

History

The church was originally dedicated to the Virgin Mary.[2]

Architecture

Built of red brick, the church consists of a Romanesque apse, chancel and nave and a Gothic porch. There is a free-standing 14th century timber bell tower adjacent to the church. The chancel has traces of a round-arched south door and of a round-arched window, now bricked up. There are also traces of two Romanesque windows in the south wall of the nave above the porch. The three cross-vaults in the nave are from the Late-Romanesque period.[2]

Interior

The altarpiece (1644) was carved in the auricular style by Henrik Werner who also created the altarpiece in Maribo Cathedral. Werner's workshop also produced the carved font (c. 1640). The crucifix on the chancel wall was found on the loft during restoration work in 1937. The figure of Christ is from c. 1300 although the cross itself is more recent. The Renaissance pulpit is from c. 1605.[2] [1]

See also

References

54.7906°N 11.1719°W

Notes and References

  1. http://www.vestenskov.dk/kirker/arninge/arningeki.htm "Arninge kirke"
  2. http://www.natmus.dk/uploads/tx_tcchurchsearch/Maribo_0315-0327.pdf Kirsten Weber-Andersen, Otto Norn, Aage Roussell, Gertrud Købke Knudsen, "Arninge Kirke"