Jump to content

St. Ansgar's Church

Coordinates: 58°08′41″N 7°59′52″E / 58.14469°N 07.99775°E / 58.14469; 07.99775
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Carsten R D (talk | contribs) at 23:48, 24 June 2016. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

St. Ansgar's Church
Sankt Ansgar kirke
Map
LocationKirkegata 3
Kristiansand
CountryNorway
DenominationRoman Catholic
WebsiteSt. Ansgar's Church Template:No icon
History
StatusParish Church
DedicationSaint Ansgar
Consecrated1936, later affected by fire and rebuilt
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Administration
DioceseOslo
ParishSt. Ansgar
Clergy
Bishop(s)Bernt Ivar Eidsvig

St. Ansgar's Church is a parish church of the Roman Catholic Church in Kristiansand, Norway. The church is the only Roman Catholic church building in Vest-Agder county in Southern Norway. The church was originally built in 1936 The current church building is built of red bricks and expanded, after total restoration after the first, whitewashed church burned in the 1980s. In addition to church services in Norwegian, it has a Holy Mass in English every Sunday afternoon at 6 p.m.[1]

History

In 1890, the Catholic church in Kristiansand was established and the German Wilhelm Hartmann from Münster was the first pastor. Just after the church's founding came Sisters of St. Joseph to town and bought a property next to the rectory. For nearly 100 years, they were an indispensable support for the fragile new church. During the reconstruction after the major town fire in 1892, it was bought several more properties, and established a Catholic hospital in the town, St Joseph's Hospital which was run until 1967.

In 1935 the church was built and was consecrated in 1936. The current church was built and expanded on the same plot.

Initially, the growing of number of church members was slow. However, the situation is completely different today, because the church is experiencing a strong growth, mainly because the relocation of Catholics of foreign origin have risen sharply.[2][3]

References

58°08′41″N 7°59′52″E / 58.14469°N 07.99775°E / 58.14469; 07.99775