According to
documented sources, a church was built at Thingvellir shortly after
the acceptance of Christianity in the year 1000. King Olaf the portly
of Norway sent wood and a church bell as a present for a church at
Thingvellir in the year 1015 according to Snorri Sturluson's history
of the Norwegian kings, Heimskringla.
The oldest cartulary of the church dates back to the latter part of
the 14th century when it was dedicated to Olaf the wholly
king of Norway. The present church was built and consecrated in 1859
and a new tower was built in 1907. It contains three bells, one old,
another from 1697 and the third one was added on the 17th
of June 1944, when the Icelandic republic was proclaimed on the
Parliamentary Plains.
The church was repaired in 1973 and 1983. The
pulpit dates back to 1683 and the altarpiece to 1834. In 1899, it was
sold to the British artist, Disney Leith, who gave it to her church on
the Isle of Wight. In 1974, the altarpiece was brought back to its
church and was put by the side of the larger one painted by the Danish
artist Anker Lund. In 1939, a round shaped honorary cemetery was
consecrated behind the church. Only two poets rest there. |

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