Nyköping, Sweden
1590-1618
Lidingö, Sweden
1623
Vellinge, Sweden
12th century
Mästerby, Sweden
13th century
Frösön, Sweden
13th century
Karlskrona, Sweden
1685
Landskrona, Sweden
1754-1788
Enköping, Sweden
12th century
Eskilstuna, Sweden
1929
Perstorp, Sweden
c. 1200
Follingbo, Sweden
c. 1200
Falun, Sweden
15th century
Vallentuna, Sweden
c. 1190
Romakloster, Sweden
1215-1255
Gotland, Sweden
ca. 1300
Västra Tunhem, Sweden
12th century
Värmdö, Sweden
c. 1323
Torna-hällestad, Sweden
12th century
Fårö, Sweden
15th century
Ekshärad, Sweden
1686-1688
Visby Cathedral (also known as St. Mary’s Church) is the only survived medieval church in Visby. It was originally built for German merchants and inaugurated in 1225. Around the year 1350 the church was enlarged and converted into a basilica. The two-storey magazine was also added then above the nave as a warehouse for merchants.
Following the Reformation, the church was transformed into a parish church for the town of Visby. All other churches were abandoned. Shortly after the Reformation, in 1572, Gotland was made into its own Diocese, and the church designated its cathedral.
There is not much left of the original interior. The font is made of local red marble in the 13th century. The pulpit was made in Lübeck in 1684. There are 400 graves under the church floor.