A history of Danish village churches and their architecture. The first churches were built of wood, but none survive in Denmark. In the 12th century stone was used; buildings were in a simple Romanesque style. Frescoes, telling Bible stories or legends of saints were used to decorate the interiors. In the 13th century bigger, more elaborate churches appeared in Gothic styles. Brick was used as a building material, particularly for additions to earlier churches. Changes at the reformation were not violent; seats became more common, since sermons were longer. Churches remain a centre of secular as well as religious life for peasants. Architectural history is briefly summarised. Supervised by Carl Th. Dreyer, Victor Herman, Bernhard Jensen, H. Longborg-Jensen.
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How to watch
Collection
In ACMI's collection
Credits
Collection metadata
ACMI Identifier
313859
Language
English
Subject categories
Anthropology, Ethnology, Exploration & Travel → Denmark - Social life and customs
Crafts & Visual Arts → Church architecture
Sound/audio
Sound
Colour
Black and White
Holdings
16mm film; Access Print (Section 1)