Church ruin

Saint Lars church ruin

Sweden Region Gotland monument in Fornminnesregistret
Saint Lars church ruin
Saint Lars church ruin · Wikipedia

About

Saint Lars Church ruin (Swedish: Sankt Lars kyrkoruin) is located in the central part of Visby on the island of Gotland, Sweden.

The church has been named after Saint Lawrence (225–258), one of the seven deacons of the city of Rome, Italy under Pope Sixtus II. Saint Lars Church was established probably around 1210-1220 as a Visby parish church as a result of the population increase in Gotland. Construction of the church began during the second quarter of the 12th century, with the choir being the oldest part of the building.

St. Drotten's Church was built adjacent to Saint Lars Church around 1240 as the German language parish church in Visby. Both churches were abandoned in connection with the Reformation in Sweden which King Gustav Vasa carried out in the 1530s.

In purely architectural terms, Saint Lars differs in its form from other Visby churches. It was probably inspired by Byzantine architecture while the other churches in Visby were similar to the German church style.

- Svahnström, Gunnar (1985) Kyrkorna i Visby ( Stockholm: Svenska kulturminnen)

- Marita Jonsson & Sven-Olof Lindqvist (1997) Gateway to Gotland (Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksell Tryckeri)

- Roberts, Michael (1968) The Early Vasas: A History of Sweden, 1523-1611 (Cambridge University Press)