St. Olav's Cathedral, Oslo

St. Olav's Cathedral
Sankt Olav domkirke
Coordinates: 59°55′5.3616″N 10°44′38.886″E / 59.918156000°N 10.74413500°E / 59.918156000; 10.74413500
Location Oslo
Country Norway
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website Website
History
Founded 1896 (1896)
Dedication Saint Olav
Architecture
Status Cathedral
Functional status Active
Architect(s) Heinrich Ernst Schirmer and
Wilhelm von Hanno
Architectural type Neo-Gothic
Administration
Parish St. Olav
Diocese Oslo
Clergy
Bishop(s) Bernt Ivar Eidsvig

St. Olav's Cathedral (Norwegian: Sankt Olav domkirke) is the cathedral of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oslo and the parish church of St. Olav's parish in Oslo, Norway.

History

At the time of construction, this church, being built at Hammersborg, near the graveyard of Our Saviour (Norwegian: Vår Frelsers gravlund), was located in the countryside outside the then city of Oslo. The work was funded by private donations and fundraising abroad, the most generous individual donor being Queen Josephine, who was a Catholic herself.[1]

The first mass of the church was celebrated on August 24, 1856, but as there was no Roman Catholic bishop in the country, the church was not consecrated until August 8, 1896.

A relic, reportedly a bone from St. Olav's arm, have been placed in a showcase since the 1860s.

When the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oslo was established in 1953, St. Olav's was chosen as the episcopal seat and was elevated to the rank of cathedral. It is the second Catholic cathedral in Oslo.[2]

The St. Olav's Cathedral was visited by Pope John Paul II when he visited the Scandinavian countries in 1989.

St. Olav's Cathedral interior

See also

References

External links

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