Neha Patil (Editor)

Gustaf Church, Copenhagen

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Country
  
Denmark

Status
  
Church

Groundbreaking
  
1908

Phone
  
+45 33 15 54 58

Architect
  
Theodor Wåhlin

Denomination
  
Protestant

Architectural type
  
Church

Opened
  
1911

Architectural style
  
Art Nouveau

Gustaf Church, Copenhagen

Location
  
4 Folke Bernadottes Allé Østerbro, Copenhagen

Address
  
Folke Bernadottes Allé 4, 2100 København Ø, Denmark

Similar
  
St Augustine's Church, Zion's Church - Copenhagen, Reformed Church - Copenhagen, Kildevæld Church, Immanuel Church - Copenhagen

Profiles

Gustaf Church (Swedish: Svenska Gustafskyrkan), part of the Church of Sweden Abroad, is the church of the Swedish congregation in Copenhagen, Denmark. It was built from 1907 to 1911 to the design of Theodor Wåhlin and is named after King Gustaf V of Sweden.

Contents

History

The Swedish Church's activities in Copenhagen began in 1901, when Pastor Nils Widner was sent there to work among Swedish sailors. The work, however, soon embraced the many thousands of other Swedes in and around Copenhagen. Religious services were initially held in the Garrison Church on Sankt Annæ Plads, and in rented premises in Rysenstensgade there were daily gatherings in the various compounds that eventually formed.

The need for a church grew, and in 1903 the Swedish Church Society was formed which saw it as its task to realize the construction of a Swedish church in Copenhagen. Swedes who then lived in Copenhagen decided to donate 10 øre per week to finance the church building and the Swedish architect Theodor Wåhlin, resident architect at Lund Cathedral, was charged with its design.

As had been the case with St. Alban's English Church two decades earlier, a site was provided by the Danish state on the bank of the moat surrounding Kastellet, although on the opposite, north-western, corner, on the site of the former Grønlands Bastion.

The foundation stone was laid in 1908 at a ceremony attended by both the Swedish and Danish royal couples, and the new church was consecrated in 1911. The Danish architect Gotfred Tvede supervised the construction assisted by Alf Jørgensen.

Architecture

The church is designed in the Jugendstil style and is built in a hard-burnt brownish brick. The complex includes church halls, community center, offices, rectory, staff houses, archives and storage rooms.

Furnishings

The current organ has 31 steps and was installed in 1947. The pulpit was created by the sculptor Niels Hansen in Copenhagen. The altar is of black granite and has the christogram IHS, usually nterpreted as Iesus, Hominum Salvator - "Jesus, Savior of man".

References

Gustaf Church, Copenhagen Wikipedia