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Gotlandic Picture Stones - The Online Edition

GP 222 Källunge kyrka IV









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Measured length
0.0
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Parish Find Location 
Källunge

Find Location 
The Romanesque nave of Källunge church.

Find Context Classification 
Church

Coordinate Find Location (lat) 
6390703

Coordinate Find Location (long) 
714141

Parish Present Location 
Unknown

Present Location 
In situ? Not traceable.

Present Location Classification 
Unknown

Coordinate Present Location (lat) 
6390703

Coordinate Present Location (long) 
714141

Material 
Limestone

Height 
64

Width 
13

Thickness 
13

Lindqvist Type 

Lindqvist Shape 

Iconographic Keywords 
 

Runic Inscription or not 
No

Context and Discovery 
An apsidal choir built between 1100 and 1150 was the first part of the church, while the present nave and the tower date to around 1150. The small Romanesque choir, however, was replaced by a new and much bigger Gothic style choir with sacristy. Both the choir and the sacristy were not finished before 1350. The tiny Romanesque nave could not be used as such anymore and therefore the ʻoversizedʼ choir serves as main part of the church. Six picture stone fragments embedded into the floor of the small nave were published by Sune Lindqvist in 1941/42 (GP 219–224 Källunge kyrka I–VI). In 1984, Beata Böttger-Niedenzu discovered three previously unknown picture stone fragments inside the choir of the church: GP 226–228 Källunge kyrka 8–10. Between 1979 and 1984, another possible picture stone was discovered in front of the sacristy door (GP 225 Källunge kyrka 7). Regarding the stones in the small nave, Lindqvist explains the situation as follows:

“Nos IV and V definitely are parts of one – or possibly two – upright picture stone(s). The others either belong to picture stones, too, or to kerbstones. All these fragments are kept in the Romanesque nave; their upwards-facing obverses are part of the flooring in this area and are flush with the floor. Nos I–V, however, are integrated into the walls, from which they protrude to a width of up to about 30 cm. No. VI gives the impression of being built into the wall in the same way, but closer examination reveals that the exposed part of the stone does not extend into the masonry. As the room has such an edging all around – which perhaps served as a bench earlier, when the floor level was lower – and this in several places is completely covered with lime mortar, it cannot be ruled out that more fragments of picture stones might be observed here in the future. Nos I–III were discovered and sketches drawn of them in 1912, the others were recognised as parts of picture stones only in 1932. Nos I–III are lying in a west-east row at the south side, No. I with its western edge 1 m to the east of the southern portal, No. IV at the west wall just south of the opening to the tower, No. V as second stone in the south wall (counted from the south-west corner), No. VI at the north wall, close to the altar in the north-east corner” (1941/42 II, p. 78).

Since the publication of “Gotlands Bildsteine”, the floor covering of the nave seems to have been renewed. As a result, the stones †GP 222–224 Källung kyrka IV–VI (RAÄ Källunge 54:5–7) are today untraceable and Lindqvist’s descriptions of stones I–III (RAÄ Källunge 54:2–4) suggest that they could be better examined in his time than today. This renewal must have taken place before 1977, as the stones IV–VI could not be found already during the RAÄ inventory. Stones I–III are only documented in the form of drawings (Roosval 1935, fig. 300; Lindqvist 1941/42 II, figs. 425–427), and no illustrations of stones IV–VI are available at all, either in Lindqvist’s book or in the archives in Stockholm and Visby.
GP 219 Källunge kyrka I
GP 220 Källunge kyrka II
GP 221 Källunge kyrka III
GP 223 Källunge kyrka V
GP 224 Källunge kyrka VI
GP 226 Källunge kyrka 8
GP 227 Källunge kyrka 9
GP 228 Källunge kyrka 10
GP 225 Källunge kyrka 7

Measurements, Material and Condition 
Lindqvist described the fragment as follows: “Limestone slab, at least 13 cm thick. The obverse is worked. The outward-facing narrow side is preserved to a length of up to 64 cm and hewn flat at right angles towards the obverse to a width of almost 13 cm, with a rather wide chamfer in between. The two other visible narrow sides are secondary. […] The fragment probably was part of the same picture stone as the fragment No. V close by” (1941/42 II, p. 79).

Description of Ornament and Images 
“The decoration features two faintly-chiselled, 1 cm wide grooves inside of the chamfer as well as the section of a roundel next to the left broken edge, with an external arched frieze surrounding a pattern of triangles. There also are faint remains of further decoration in the field outside of the roundel” (Lindqvist 1941/42 II, p. 79).

Interpretation of the Imagery 
No interpretation

Type and Dating 
Early type monument, i.e., ʻAbschnittʼ A according to Lindqvist’s typology, dating to circa AD 400–600. Probably a fragment of a tall, erected Type A monument.

References 
Lindqvist 1941/42 II, p. 79.

 
Fyndplats
Bildstenen observerades första gången 1932, liggande i långhusets golv.

Nuvarande lokalisering
Oklar, går inte att återfinna.

Beskrivning
Troligen fragment av en stor tidig bildsten (period A), 64 cm lång och 13 cm bred, med svaga spår av kantdekor och rester av en rundel.

Inskrift
Ingen inskrift

Datering
Kan inte dateras med säkerhet, men tillhör perioden cirka 400-600.

Tolkning
Ingen tolkning.

AA

Title
GP 222 Källunge kyrka IV

Fornsök ID 
L1976:4050-4053, 3923, 3924

RAÄ ID 
Källunge 54 (2-7)

Jan Peder Lamm ID 
164a

Lindqvist Title 
Källunge, Kirche IV


Last modified Apr 11, 2025

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