History of Christianity in Norway

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The history of Christianity in Norway started in the Viking Age in the 9th century. Trade, plundering raids, and travel brought the Norsemen into close contacts with Christian communities, but their conversion only started after powerful chieftains decided to receive baptism during their stay in England or Normandy. Haakon the Good was the first king to make efforts to convert the whole country, but the rebellious pagan chieftains forced him to apostatize. Olaf Tryggvason started the destruction of pagan cult sites in the late 10th century, but only Olaf Haraldsson achieved the official adaption of Christianity in the 1020s. Missionary bishops subjected to the archbishops of Hamburg-Bremen were responsible for the spread of the new faith before the earliest bishoprics were established around 1100.

A goldleaf depicting a man with large eyes who holds his hands on his chest
A gullgubber depicting a ghost

Manuscripts written in the 13th century preserved most information about the Norsemen's pre-Christian religious beliefs.[1] The Poetic Edda contain Old Norse poems about the creation and the end of the world.[1] Snorri Sturluson incorporated several myths of Odin, Thor, Týr, and other pagan gods in his Prose Edda.[2] Odin was the most important god of the pantheon, but he was never regarded omnipotent.[2] The gods were thought to live in farms together with their spouses and children, just like their mortal worshippers.[2] The Eddas also mentioned the jötnar (or giants), describing them as the gods' superhuman enemies.[2]

Old Norse religious practises are poorly documented.[3] The chieftains were allegedly the religious leaders of their communities, because the existence of a separate cast of priests cannot be detected.[4] Most cult sites, known as hofs, were large halls built on the chieftains' farms.[3] Gullgubbersmall gold objects decorated with pagan motifsplaced near poles in early medieval buildings in Mære, Kleppe, and other places are most frequently interpreted as a sign of a pagan cult center by archaeologists.[5] Christian laws also mentioned outdoor cult sites which were known as horgs.[6] Bans on eating horsemeat after the official conversion to Christianity imply that it was an important element of pagan cults.[3]

Norsemen buried their dead in the ground or cremated them, but they always placed burial gifts in the graves.[6] The wealth and social status of the deceased influenced the size of their graves and the amount of grave goods.[6] The highest-ranking chiefs and their relatives were buried under large burial mounds, but the poorest commoners' graves were almost invisible.[6]

The shamanistic belief system of the nomadic Saami, who lived in the northern regions, was different from the Old Norse religion.[6] The Saami mainly worshipped benevolent goddesses and buried their dead under piles of stones.[7] They were famed for their healing abilities for centuries, but their Christian neighbors often regarded them as wizards and sorcerers.[7]

Middle Ages

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