©  Photo:

Lisbjerg Church

Lisbjerg Church was built in the 12th century on a spot where there was a tree church in the Viking Age.

Lisbjerg Church once had a golden altar. This was handed over to the National Museum in the 1860s. The current altar decoration consists of a golden cross by Mogens Jørgensen and a woven antependium by Gudrun Stenberg.

The mosaic in the reopened east window was made by the same artists. The church, whose original parts were probably built in the early Romanesque period, was consecrated to the Holy Trinity in the Middle Ages. The tower and porch with its fine multi-storey blindings were probably built in the late Middle Ages.

The pulpit dates from 1871 and the simple baptismal font from the Romanesque period. The pews and floor were renovated in 1994.