Ornate basilicas, cave chapels and even a glass HIGH-HEELED SHOE for weddings: Incredible images of the world's most jaw-dropping churches, from Hawaii to Taiwan via England
- Amazing Churches Of The World, by Michael Kerrigan, contains 190 images of jaw-dropping churches
- Leaf through its pages and you'll gaze upon churches that are ornate, immense, intimate and bizarre
- Michael writes: 'Whatever vanities they may represent, churches can’t help but be uplifting'
Virgin Mary and St Simon the Tanner Cathedral, Cairo, Egypt
Simon the Tanner, a 10th-century Coptic saint, is best known for the
story that he literally moved a mountain to demonstrate God’s power to a
doubtful caliph. St Simon's Church has been carved out of Cairo's
Mokattam Mountain, the exact feature that he is said to have moved, the
book explains. There was a cave here before (discovered in 1974), but
while it extended deep beneath the rock and stretched over a wide area,
it was full to the roof with stones and had only a 3ft gap at its main
entrance. Work began to open up and clear the cavern to create this
cathedral in 1991
Cathedral of Brasilia, Brazil
'I was attracted by the curve – the liberated, sensual curve suggested
by the possibilities of new technology yet so often recalled in
venerable old baroque churches,' said the architectural genius Oscar
Niemeyer (1907–2012), who brought the whole city of Brasilia into being.
It’s appropriate that he should have been the one to design this house
for the ultimate Creator, writes Michael
Graha Maria Annai Velangkanni, Medan, Indonesia
This is not a Buddhist temple or a Mughal mosque but a Catholic church –
a Marian shrine [a shrine to the Virgin Mary], writes Michael. In
Velangkanni, Tamil Nadu, India, in the 17th century, 'Our Lady of Good
Health' [the Virgin Mary] appeared to a shepherd boy, after which a
number of miraculous cures were worked. Her statue, sent to Indonesia in
2002, has been associated with further healings here, at what has since
become an important place of pilgrimage
Portuguese church, Namibe Province, Angola
Catholicism has endured in Angola since the Portuguese colonists were
driven out in 1975. Even so, a great many churches stand abandoned, such
as this one in the country’s south-eastern desert
Agios Nikolaos church, Protaras, Cyprus
Agios Nikolaos Church (St Nicholas’s) is almost literally dazzling in
its whiteness, set off as it is by the sky blue of its dome and door –
as well as, of course, the blue of the sky itself and the azure
Mediterranean in the background, says Michael. Whitewashing was
introduced as a way of reflecting heat - here an otherwise ordinary
little church is transfigured into something miraculously beautiful
St Peter's Basilica, Rome
The ultimate in churches, the ultimate emblem of the Catholic faith – for better but also for worse, it has been suggested, writes Michael. Built on the site where the martyred St Peter’s bones had, tradition says, been laid, St Peter's Basilica, completed in 1626, brought together a star-studded cast of Italian Renaissance architects, including Donato Bramante, Michelangelo and – a generation later – Gian Lorenzo Bernini. His astonishing baldacchino (above) canopies the papal altar and St Peter’s bones
Borgund stave church, Sogn og Fjordane, Norway
Hundreds of 'stave churches' like this were built across Norway in the 12th and 13th centuries, reveals Michael. All-wooden in construction, they had timber frames, were walled with interlocking planks (or 'staves') and roofed with wooden shingles. Carved dragon-heads give the gables on this one a 'Viking' look. It's now part of the Lutheran Church of Norway
High-Heel Wedding Church, Budai Township, Taiwan
Taiwan, the Nationalist-ruled Republic of China, broke away from the
Communist 'People’s Republic' in 1949, writes Michael. Its existence has
been an irritant to the Beijing authorities ever since. Highly
urbanized, and strongly orientated to the West, it has never been
abashed about its eager embrace of consumerism. This 17m (56ft) shoe in
glass and concrete caters to young couples in Budai Township. It's
apparently the biggest high-heel-shaped building in the world
Catholic Church, Tonlé Sap Lake, Cambodia
Something like a million people live in the various floating villages scattered along the shores of Tonlé Sap in the Mekong Basin, reveals Michael. They fish in the lake's waters and grow rice along its swampy margins. Otherwise, they lead normal lives – albeit on the water. Not just their homes, but their schools and churches are built on rafts
Ieud Hill Church, Maramureș, Romania
The Maramureș area of northern Romania has almost a hundred traditional wood-built churches, writes Michael. They're made from logs, rather than from planking or from boards. Squat and often very small, this kind of building is marked out by its slim, shapely bell-tower and a roof that strikes the outsider as seeming too big for the church. Inside they tend to be decorated with (often rough and ready) wall paintings
Hallgrímskirkja, Reykjavík, Iceland
Michael writes: It could almost be a mountain or a rocky crag, its
surface stepped by erosion or striated by glacial abrasure as it rises
up out of the icy earth, its stone face blue with cold against a golden
evening sky. Standing 74.5m (244ft) tall, Iceland’s leading Lutheran
church, completed in 1986, towers over the country’s capital city
St Benedict's Catholic Church or the Old Painted Church of Honaunau, Hawaii
In the early 1900s, writes Michael, Father John Veighe, parish priest of Honaunau, took it upon himself to repaint the inside of his church. Not just a lick of magnolia, though, he created a spectacular neo-Gothic phantasmagoria, with trompe l’oeil arches, vaulting and beautifully painted frescos, making a soaring, spacious impression of a medieval cathedral out of his boxy, modern, wood-built church
Noravank Monastery, Yeghegnadzor, Armenia
Spectacularly situated in the mountains south of Lake Sevan, writes
Michael, the Noravank complex dates back to the 14th century. It belongs
to the Armenian Apostolic Church, a branch of Eastern Orthodoxy.
Dedicated to Surb Ashvatsatsin, the Holy Mother of God, this church was
built in 1339. Its designer, Momik, was distinguished as a sculptor as
well as for his architecture – and his creation here does look as if
it's been carved out of the valley's virgin stone. Reliefs above the
doors on the western side, with its converging steps, show the Virgin
Mary flanked by the Archangels Michael and Gabriel and Christ, with
Saints Peter and Paul
Abandoned church, Bokor National Park, Cambodia
Standing 1,048m (almost 3,500ft) above sea level, southern Cambodia’s Bokor Mountain summit offers some relief from the tropical heat, writes Michael. Hence its development by the French colonialists of the 19th century as a 'hill station' – a place they could escape to from their sweaty, sultry city of Phnom Penh. This Catholic church offered a spiritual centre for what was, until the 1940s, a bustling resort
Cathedral Of Christ The Light, Oakland, USA
Christ The Light is the first cathedral built entirely in the 21st century, and replaced Oakland's Cathedral of Saint Francis de Sales, severely damaged in an earthquake in 1989. Architect Craig W. Harman said that he sought the effect of light filtering down 'through a canopy of redwood trees', explains Michael
Temple Of Valadier, Genga, Italy
Tucked in beneath the raking roof of a limestone cave in the Apennines, this octagonal chapel was constructed as a 'Refuge of Sinners', writes Michael. Built in 1828, it was commissioned by Pope (and local boy) Leo XII (1760–1829) and designed by the celebrated neoclassical architect Giuseppe Valadier (1762–1839)
Chapel Of The Holy Cross, Arizona, USA
A visit to New York in the 1930s inspired Marguerite Brunswig Staude twice over, writes Michael. As a Catholic, she was thrilled by the grandeur of St Patrick's Cathedral. As a sculptor, she revelled in the technological achievement of the Empire State Building. She came away with the hope of a design so sublime that it would almost compel reverence – 'that God may come to life in the souls of all men and be a living reality'. It's hard to imagine a more stunning church in a more spectacular setting than this chapel, carved into one of the red rock bluffs of Staude's home state. Built between 1955 and 1956, it became a Catholic chapel, but has no services - its builder wanted it to be a place for general, non-denominational prayer and
Church Of St Mary and All Saints, Chesterfield, UK
An unmistakable landmark, the crooked spire of the Church Of St Mary and
All Saints in Chesterfield is believed to have been caused by the
action of the summer sun on the warmer, southern side, which warped the
roof’s lead covering and pulled it out of true, reveals Michael. There’s
believed to have been a church here since the end of the 9th century
Church Of The Holy Sepulchre, Jerusalem
No shrine could be more sacred than this, writes Michael. The Holy Sepulchre encompasses not just the summit of Mount Calvary, where Christ was crucified, but also the tomb in which his tortured corpse was laid. His Resurrection on the third day was, of course, to be the founding miracle of the Christian faith, so the church is naturally a magnet for pilgrims. There's a whole complex of buildings here, including a beautifully decorated Coptic chapel (opposite) and, on the roof, the Deir es-Sultan monastery, plus the 12th-century Armenian Chapel of St Helena
All images are taken from the book Amazing Churches Of The World by Michael Kerrigan (ISBN 978-1-78274-983-7) published by Amber Books and available from bookshops and online booksellers (RRP £19.99)
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