Annaassisitta Oqaluffia, Greenland’s Cathedral, is the Church of Our Saviour in Nuuk. The elevated northsouth-facing church (23 × 12 m), located north of the old town, is clad in red-painted, lap-boarded planks, and the pitched roof is covered with shingles. A white-painted portico with a triangular gable, columns and stately staircase forms the entrance. Above this is a small tower with slender, copper-clad pyramidal roof and a clock from 1928, which was the year of the town’s 200th anniversary. Four dials are inlaid in the tower, so that you can see the time from all corners of the world.
The white-painted church room is panelled, and to both sides of the aisle are white-painted wooden benches. Instead of an altarpiece, there is a large crucifix flanked by two kneeling angels made of plaster of Paris. The altar silver, dated 1722, was donated by King Christian VI. On the south wall hangs a frequently reproduced painting by J.E.C. Rasmussen, which depicts the kneeling Hans Egede in a snow-covered landscape. Behind the church is a listed cemetery, where, among others, hymn writer Rasmus Berthelsen is buried.
Further reading
- Building customs and architecture
- Greenland painters
- Hans Egede and the work for the mission service
- Hans Egede’s Church in Nuuk
- Museums of cultural history and heritage
- Religion and religious communities
- The colonial period until the war years
- Towns and settlements
- Traditions and tales
- Visual arts and crafts
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