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Jerusalem mitt i byn. Det tidigmedeltida kyrkobyggandet ur rituellt perspektiv.

Nilsson, Ing-Marie LU (2007) In Bebyggelsehistorisk tidskrift 52. p.33-40
Abstract
The stone churches of the early medieval period are commonly supposed to have been built at the instance of society’s upper echelon, the buildingsthemselves being seen as symbolic proclamations

of the social hegemony of the class concerned. The present article seeks to broaden the perspective regarding both the prime movers of church building and their motives. The building of a church required the participation of a number and variety of social groupings, and the possibility is suggested of the parish farmers, as well as the patron, having found aspects of the building project attractive. True, the building enterprise − a strain on both economic and manpower resources − can be said to confirm the fundamentally hierarchic... (More)
The stone churches of the early medieval period are commonly supposed to have been built at the instance of society’s upper echelon, the buildingsthemselves being seen as symbolic proclamations

of the social hegemony of the class concerned. The present article seeks to broaden the perspective regarding both the prime movers of church building and their motives. The building of a church required the participation of a number and variety of social groupings, and the possibility is suggested of the parish farmers, as well as the patron, having found aspects of the building project attractive. True, the building enterprise − a strain on both economic and manpower resources − can be said to confirm the fundamentally hierarchic structure of society, but at the same time it helped to reshape that structure. Church building and the liturgical practices of the Church articulated the inferior social standing of the peasants but can also be seen as part of the creation of a collective consciousness on the part of this group. The article also points to the importance of understanding church building in relation to a society infused with Christian norms and ideals. Lastly, parallels are drawn between early medieval church building and the crusades. Both were regarded as deeds conferring religious merit, both involved rallying a huge number of people in pursuit of a specific objective, to achieve which they were prepared to make a variety of sacrifices. The crusaders were intent on making their way to Jerusalem in the Holy Land, the early

medieval church builders on creating their own Jerusalem back home in the village. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Christianity, medieval churches, church building, crusades
in
Bebyggelsehistorisk tidskrift
volume
52
pages
33 - 40
ISSN
0349-2834
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
5a126eb2-4ad9-46c9-b6ef-204222bf6689 (old id 607292)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 13:22:11
date last changed
2020-04-14 10:54:33
@article{5a126eb2-4ad9-46c9-b6ef-204222bf6689,
  abstract     = {{The stone churches of the early medieval period are commonly supposed to have been built at the instance of society’s upper echelon, the buildingsthemselves being seen as symbolic proclamations<br/><br>
of the social hegemony of the class concerned. The present article seeks to broaden the perspective regarding both the prime movers of church building and their motives. The building of a church required the participation of a number and variety of social groupings, and the possibility is suggested of the parish farmers, as well as the patron, having found aspects of the building project attractive. True, the building enterprise − a strain on both economic and manpower resources − can be said to confirm the fundamentally hierarchic structure of society, but at the same time it helped to reshape that structure. Church building and the liturgical practices of the Church articulated the inferior social standing of the peasants but can also be seen as part of the creation of a collective consciousness on the part of this group. The article also points to the importance of understanding church building in relation to a society infused with Christian norms and ideals. Lastly, parallels are drawn between early medieval church building and the crusades. Both were regarded as deeds conferring religious merit, both involved rallying a huge number of people in pursuit of a specific objective, to achieve which they were prepared to make a variety of sacrifices. The crusaders were intent on making their way to Jerusalem in the Holy Land, the early<br/><br>
medieval church builders on creating their own Jerusalem back home in the village.}},
  author       = {{Nilsson, Ing-Marie}},
  issn         = {{0349-2834}},
  keywords     = {{Christianity; medieval churches; church building; crusades}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{33--40}},
  series       = {{Bebyggelsehistorisk tidskrift}},
  title        = {{Jerusalem mitt i byn. Det tidigmedeltida kyrkobyggandet ur rituellt perspektiv.}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/6103020/2270104.pdf}},
  volume       = {{52}},
  year         = {{2007}},
}