St. Olav’S Church was the tallest church in Medieval Europe. The earliest
data on St. Olav’s Church come from 1267. Little is known about the building
of this Gothic style church and its early years, but there may have been a church
on this location as early as the 12th century, alongside the Scandinavian market
yard.
The church was named after the Norwegian king Olav II Haraldsson, canonised
as a saint. St. Olav was considered to be the protector of seafarers.
Around 1500, the building reached a height of 159 meters (now 123,7m), and
became the world’s tallest building of the time. The motivation for building
such an immensely tall steeple must have been to use it as a maritime signpost,
which made the trading city of Tallinn visible from far out at sea. There was
also a risk, however: the steeple has been hit by lightning at least eight times,
and the whole church has burned down three times. The fire could be seen from
Finland, all the way across the Gulf.
An additional intriguing detail about St. Olav’s comes from the Chronicles
of Russow. In 1547, a group of acrobats visited Tallinn and tied a rope from
the top of St. Olav’s steeple to the city wall. They performed dizzying
tightrope tricks, to the delight and dismay of the city folk.
Legend says that once upon a time the nobles of Tallinn decided to build the
tallest church in the world, in hopes of luring more merchants to the city.
But where to find a master builder capable of carrying out such a task? Suddenly,
a large, quiet stranger appeared out of nowhere and promised to build the church,
but the payment he asked was more than the city could pay. The man was willing
to forego payment, on just one condition - the city people had to guess his
name.
The stranger worked fast and talked to no one. The church was nearly finished
and the city fathers grew more anxious by the day. Finally, they sent a spy
to sniff out the stranger’s name. The spy found the builder’s home,
where a woman was singing a lullaby to a child: "Sleep, my baby, sleep,
Olev will come home soon, with gold enough to buy the moon." Now the city
people had the man’s name! They called out to the builder, who was attaching
a cross on the top of the steeple, "Olev, Olev, the cross is crooked!"
Upon hearing this, Olev lost his balance and fell all the way down. Legend tells
of a frog and a snake that crawled out of Olev’s mouth as he lay there
on the ground. Building the enormous structure had required the help of dark
powers. Yet the builder’s name was given to the church, named after St.
Olav
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