Our Old Church Porches and Their Former Use From the Danish early Medieval Romanesque parish church to the fully developed late Medieval church, with its extensions, there is a long way. The most common addition is the porch. The origins of the porch -if there are any- may equally well be found in domestic as in ecclesiastical architecture, since many houses seem to have had porches, e.g. the houses of Fyrkat. But if the parish church is compared with the early Christian basilicas, our porches have most in common with the so-called "endo-narthex". The early wooden churches seem not to have had porches and the Anglo-Saxon porches were more likely chapels, for b...
Roodscreens dividing church chancels and naves, topped with the image of Christ on the cross and oft...
Assembling for the first time a braced, timber frame as a freestanding structure, where no piece co...
Roodscreens dividing church chancels and naves, topped with the image of Christ on the cross and oft...
The city of Norwich possesses thirty-two parish church porches. Collectively, they offer an opportun...
The reconst...
Wooden cloisters at Danish monasteriesVarious studies have shown that most of the cloisters known at...
The Norwegian stave-church. An analysisBroadly stated, the extensive debate on the origin of the so-...
Only few of the Danish medieval parish churches can be dated. This paper presents an attempt of doin...
This thesis explores mid-twelfth century church architectures in west Sweden. The architectures are ...
The Gothic Maze focuses on the vigorous building activity among the 2,692 parish churches in medieva...
Greensted Church preserves a wooden Anglo-Saxon church, and it is the oldest wooden church in Europe...
Churches in Sweden began to be built when Christianity was introduced at about the end of the first ...
This paper presents a study of the iconographic relationship between medieval church porches and the...
Conspicuous architecture. Medieval round churches in ScandinaviaThe aim of this article is partly to...
Local parish churches were the most ubiquitous permanent structures of the English Middle Ages, but ...
Roodscreens dividing church chancels and naves, topped with the image of Christ on the cross and oft...
Assembling for the first time a braced, timber frame as a freestanding structure, where no piece co...
Roodscreens dividing church chancels and naves, topped with the image of Christ on the cross and oft...
The city of Norwich possesses thirty-two parish church porches. Collectively, they offer an opportun...
The reconst...
Wooden cloisters at Danish monasteriesVarious studies have shown that most of the cloisters known at...
The Norwegian stave-church. An analysisBroadly stated, the extensive debate on the origin of the so-...
Only few of the Danish medieval parish churches can be dated. This paper presents an attempt of doin...
This thesis explores mid-twelfth century church architectures in west Sweden. The architectures are ...
The Gothic Maze focuses on the vigorous building activity among the 2,692 parish churches in medieva...
Greensted Church preserves a wooden Anglo-Saxon church, and it is the oldest wooden church in Europe...
Churches in Sweden began to be built when Christianity was introduced at about the end of the first ...
This paper presents a study of the iconographic relationship between medieval church porches and the...
Conspicuous architecture. Medieval round churches in ScandinaviaThe aim of this article is partly to...
Local parish churches were the most ubiquitous permanent structures of the English Middle Ages, but ...
Roodscreens dividing church chancels and naves, topped with the image of Christ on the cross and oft...
Assembling for the first time a braced, timber frame as a freestanding structure, where no piece co...
Roodscreens dividing church chancels and naves, topped with the image of Christ on the cross and oft...