'Skálholt' (
Old Icelandic: 'Skálaholt') is an historical site situated in the south of
Iceland at the river
Hvítá.
The village Skálholt consists only of a relatively big church and a few houses. Nevertheless, it has been of great importance for the history of the country. Since the
Middle Ages and until
1785, it was along with
Hólar, one of Iceland's two
episcopal sees, making it a cultural and political center as well. The first school in the country was founded at Skálholt. And in the year
1550 the last
catholic bishop,
Jón Arason of Hólar, was executed there along with his two sons.
The size of the church seems exceptional by Icelandic standards. In fact, the length of the church constructed from
1956 to
1963 is 30 m. But some of its predecessors were even longer (up to 50 m). Some other Scandinavian countries contributed to the present interior of the church.
Adam of Bremen, writing around
1075, describes Skálholt (''Scaldholz'') as the "largest city" in Iceland.
See also
★
List of Skálholt bishops
★
List of settlements in Iceland
★
History of Iceland
References
★
Adam of Bremen (edited by G. Waitz) (1876). ''Gesta Hammaburgensis Ecclesiae Pontificum''. Berlin.
Available online
★ Adam of Bremen (translated by Francis Joseph Tschan and Timothy Reuter) (2002). ''History of the Archbishops of Hamburg-Bremen''. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0231125755
External links
★
Official website
★
Skálholt.is