Hraungerðiskirkja Explained

Hraungerðiskirkja (in Icelandic pronounced as /ˈr̥œynˌcɛrðɪsˌcʰɪr̥ca/) is a Lutheran church in Flóahreppur, Iceland. [1]

The church was designed by Eiríkur Gíslason from Bitra in Hraungerðishreppur and built in 1902. It stands on the site of another former church that dated back to 1200 CE. It is a wooden church with a red roof. On each side of the church are four windows, curved from the top with six-pane frames. Above the front door of the church are three windows. The church is clad in panel board with the chancel wall and the truss clad in flat slabs. [2]

The church exterior was renovated, the tower rebuilt, concrete plastered, repairs to the frame and new windows installed as well as protective doors in 1993-97 under the supervision of Hjörleif Stefánsson. [3]

External links

63.9489°N -20.821°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hraungerðiskirkja . The Churches of Iceland. November 5, 2018 . December 1, 2019.
  2. Web site: Hraungerðiskirkja . islandihnotskurn.is. December 1, 2019.
  3. Web site: Hraungerðiskirkja (1902) . kirkjukort.net . December 1, 2019 . March 14, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120314084930/http://kirkjukort.net/kirkjur/hraungerdiskirkja_086.html . dead .