Resmo church

Resmo church

Resmo church is one of Sweden's oldest churches. It was built around the year 1100. It has many archaic features and bears witness to important contacts with the southern Baltic Sea and Denmark

Preserved rune stones tell about the family that had the contacts that made the church building possible.

The church is built with a nave, chancel and apse in thin layers of limestone. The masonry technique is archaic and the walls stood for a long time without plaster. For finer details, sandstone and lime tuff have been used. The limestone must have been imported from Denmark. The lower part of the west tower was built at the same time as the nave. Three portals; west, south and north, have led into the church. All with a strong oak log as relief for the masonry above. The longhouse has had four tall windows on each side. They have been divided into two round-arched spaces by a wooden balustrade. In the east, a small round window has previously directed the gaze towards the kingdom of heaven. In the chancel and apse there are early medieval plaster paintings. Chalk paintings from the later Middle Ages and the 1600th century can still be seen on the nave walls. At the beginning of the 1200th century, an east tower was built. The west tower was completed at the same time. The lowest meter of the east tower is still intact. Despite centuries of repairs and alterations - mainly larger windows, Resmo church still preserves the spatial mystique of the early medieval church room.