List of oldest church buildings
This article lists some but by no means all of the oldest known church buildings in the world. In most instances, buildings listed here were reconstructed numerous times and only fragments of the original buildings have survived. These surviving freestanding buildings were purposely constructed for use by congregations. The dates are the approximate dates when they were first used by congregations for worship.
"Church" may be used in the sense of "Christian denomination" or in the singular as the Christian Church as a whole. The "church" is traced to Pentecost and the beginning of the Christian mission in the first century and was not used in reference to a building.
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia the Cenacle in Jerusalem was the "first Christian church." Archaeology magazine suggests that the Dura-Europos church in Syria is the oldest surviving church building in the world, while Jordan's Aqaba Church is considered to be the world's first purpose-built church. Several authors have cited the Etchmiadzin Cathedral as the oldest cathedral.
Also St. Thaddeus Monastery or Qara Kelisa in Chaldoran County, Iran is noted by UNESCO World Heritage Centre as related to the 66 AD. "According to Armenian tradition such a location was chosen because saint Thaddeus built the earliest church--parts of which are still believed to be in place as the base of the old section--upon the ruins of the temple." In the 66 AD, he as one of the Apostles and :hy:Սանդուխտ|SanDokht and other Thaddeus' devotees were tortured and executed by Armenia's King Sanatrouk or Sanadruk.
Early Christianity
Church buildings of the 2nd to 4th centuries, either excavated archaeologically or substantially preserved.Africa
Asia
Europe
- Valkum Built before 433 AD remains of a Bazilika in Hungary near lake Balaton
Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages
Africa
Asia
Europe
- The Dead Cities of Syria feature ruins of many churches, all abandoned prior to the 8th century and many dating from the 4th and 5th centuries
- St. George's Church, Rihab, Jordan, 1st to 8th centuries. Dates are contested by experts but area under the church may have been used for Christian worship as early as 33 AD
- Church of Sts. Constantine and Helen, Yabroud, Syria, 5th century, Built from Roman temple; Desecrated in 2014 by extremists in Syrian Civil War
- Al-Aqiser church, built in 500s, oldest church building in Iraq.
- Saint Elijah's Monastery, near Mosul, Iraq is a 6th-century ruin and among the oldest monasteries in Iraq
- St. George's Church, Izra, Syria, Built in the 6th century
- Saint Hripsime Church, built 618 AD in Armenia
- The Hanging Church, Built c. 690 on site of earlier church, possibly the oldest church building in Egypt
- Ateni Sioni Church, early 7th century, Georgia
- Anchiskhati Basilica, built in the 600s, the oldest church building in Tbilisi.
- São Pedro de Balsemão, built in the 7th century, possibly oldest church building in Portugal.
- Densuş Church, built in 600s, oldest church building in Romania
- St Peter's Church, Monkwearmouth, UK, porch and west wall date from 674 AD
- St Paul's Church, Jarrow, UK, parts – including the original dedication stone – date from 685 AD
- St Peter’s Church, Titchfield, Hampshire, UK, some parts remain from c. 680
- St Laurence's Church, Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire, UK, Anglo-Saxon, could have been founded by St Aldhelm c. 700 AD, although its style suggests 10th or 11th century.
- Great Church, Elst, Netherlands, church built in the 15th century, built upon and using the remains of two Gallo-Roman temples.
- Gallarus Oratory, built between the 6th and 9th centuries, Possibly the oldest church building in Ireland
- Church of Holy Cross, Nin, built in the 9th century, oldest church building in Croatia
- Kadamattom Church, India, built in the 9th century.
- St. Mary's Forane Church, Kaduthuruthy, India, built in 500 AD. Also known as Kaduthuruthy Valiya Palli
- Church of Ayios Lazaros, Larnaca, built in the 9th century, one of the oldest churches in Cyprus
- Church of SS. Peter and Paul, built at Budeč fortified settlement between 895 and 905 during rule of Spytihněv I is the oldest extant church building in the Czech Republic. The site is located near village of Zákolany, about NW of Prague.
- Tkhaba-Yerdy Church, Russia, built prior to the 9th century
- Greensted Church, UK, built in the mid-9th or mid-11th century, oldest wooden church building in Europe
- Worth Church, UK, dated c. 950 to 1050 AD.
- Shoana Church, Russia, built c. the 10th century
- Senty Church, Russia, built c. the 10th century
- Church of Tarnaszentmária, built at the end of the 10th century
- The Pantheon in Rome became a church in AD 608.
High to Late Middle Ages
Building | Image | Location | Country | Oldest Part | Denomination | Notes |
Church of Our Lady | Aarhus | Denmark | 1060 | Lutheran | An older wooden church was on the site in the 10th century. The crypt of the church is the oldest extant stone church in Scandinavia. It is still functioning as a church. | |
Cathedral of Pisa | Pisa | Italy | 1063 | Roman Catholic | Built on the foundations of an older church. Dedicated to the Assumption of St. Mary, it is a Primatial church. | |
Santiago de Compostela Cathedral | Santiago de Compostela, Galicia | Spain | 1075 | Roman Catholic | According to tradition, the Apostle James, son of Zebedee spread Christianity in the Iberian Peninsula. In the year 44 he was beheaded in Jerusalem and his remains were later transferred to Galicia in a stone boat. The king Alfonso II of Asturias ordered the construction of a chapel in 810s in the place. This chapel was followed by a first church in 829 and later by a pre-Romanesque church on 899, gradually becoming an important place of pilgrimage. In 997 this primitive church was reduced to ashes by Almanzor, commander of the army of the Caliphate of Cordoba. The construction of the current cathedral in the same place was built between 1075 and 1122 under the reign of Alfonso VI of León and Castile. The baroque façade of Obradoiro was made in 1740; also baroque is that of Acibecharía; that of Pratarías was built by Master Esteban in 1103; the Pórtico da Gloria, a primordial work of Romanesque sculpture, completed by Master Mateo in 1188. | |
Church of the Holy Mother of God, Asen's Fortress | Asen's Fortress | Bulgaria | 1100–1200 | Bulgarian Orthodox Church | Medieval Eastern Orthodox church located in Asen's Fortress. It lies near Asenovgrad in the Rhodope Mountains of Plovdiv Province, south central Bulgaria. Constructed most likely in the 12th century, it features two stories, of which the upper story is the church proper and the lower story is of unclear function. The rectangular tower over the church's narthex is regarded as the earliest preserved of its kind in the Balkans. Fragments of frescoes are visible on the walls of the church's upper story. | |
Church of St Demetrius of Thessaloniki, Veliko Tarnovo | Veliko Tarnovo | Bulgaria | 1185 | Bulgarian Orthodox Church | Medieval Bulgarian Orthodox Church in the city of Veliko Tarnovo in central northern Bulgaria, the former capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire. The church lies at the northeastern foot of the Trapezitsa and Tsarevets hills, on the right bank of the Yantra River, outside the city's medieval fortifications. Architecturally, it has a pentahedral apse and a cross-domed design with a narthex and a fore-apse space. It was once part of a large monastery and belonged in its southeastern part. The church's exterior is decorated with blind arches and colourful ornaments: glazed rosettes, suns, rhombs and other painted figures. The church was built of stone alternated with three rows of bricks. It is in size. The church was the place where the anti-Byzantine Uprising of Asen and Peter was proclaimed in 1185; it was this uprising that led to the reestablishment of the Bulgarian Empire and the proclamation of Tarnovo for its capital. | |
Holy Forty Martyrs Church, Veliko Tarnovo | Veliko Tarnovo | Bulgaria | 1230 | Bulgarian Orthodox Church | Medieval Eastern Orthodox church constructed in 1230 in the town of Veliko Tarnovo in Bulgaria, the former capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire. The Holy Forty Martyrs Church, an elongated six-columned basilica, has three semicircular apses and a narrow narthex from the west. Another building was added later to the west side of the church. The church interior was covered with mural painting probably in 1230. On the western addition some of the outer decoration survived revealing the traditional arches and coloured small ceramic plates inserted into the wall. It is not clear if the church has frescoes painted on the outer walls. Some of the Bulgarian Empire's most significant historical records are stored in the church, including Omurtag's Column, Asen's Column and the Border Column from Rodosto from the rule of Khan Krum. | |
St. Michael's Church | Vienna | Austria | 1220–1240 | Roman Catholic | One of the oldest churches in Vienna, Austria, and also one of its few remaining Romanesque buildings. Dedicated to the Archangel Michael, St. Michael's Church is located at Michaelerplatz across from St. Michael's Gate at the Hofburg Palace. | |
Church of Saints Peter and Paul, Veliko Tarnovo | Veliko Tarnovo | Bulgaria | 1218–1241 | Bulgarian Orthodox Church | Medieval Bulgarian Orthodox church in the city of Veliko Tarnovo in central northern Bulgaria, the former capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire. The 13th-century church lies at the foot of the Tsarevets hill's northern slopes and was reconstructed in 1981. The church is dedicated to the Christian Apostles Saint Peter and Saint Paul. It follows the cross-domed design and has a single apse. The cella is divided into three naves by two rows of columns. The columns' capitals are decorated with plastic carving and tracery. The church has a high, massive iconostasis. According to the 14th-century account of Patriarch Evtimiy, the church and the surrounding monastery were built on the order of Tsar Ivan Asen II's wife Anna. | |
Ascension Cathedral | Veliko Tarnovo | Bulgaria | 1331–1371 | Bulgarian Orthodox Church | Reconstructed Eastern Orthodox cathedral in the city of Veliko Tarnovo, in north central Bulgaria. Located on top of the fortified Tsarevets hill in the former capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire, the cathedral was the seat of the Bulgarian patriarch from its construction in the 11th–12th century to its destruction in 1393. Standing on top of a late Roman church, the cathedral, reconstructed in the 1970s and 1980s, follows a cross-domed plan with a bell tower and a triple apse. Richly decorated on both the exterior and interior, its internal walls now feature modern frescoes, the presence of which has meant that it has not been reconsecrated. Though not active as a Christian place of worship, it has been open for visitors since 1985. | |
Church of Christ Pantocrator, Nesebar | Nesebar | Bulgaria | 1331–1371 | Bulgarian Orthodox Church | Medieval Eastern Orthodox church in the eastern Bulgarian town of Nesebar, on the Black Sea coast of Burgas Province. Part of the Ancient Nesebar UNESCO World Heritage Site, the Church of Christ Pantocrator was constructed in the 13th–14th century and is best known for its lavish exterior decoration. The church, today an art gallery, survives largely intact and is among Bulgaria's best preserved churches of the Middle Ages. | |
Church of Saint Paraskevi, Nesebar | Nesebar | Bulgaria | 1331–1371 | Bulgarian Orthodox Church | Partially preserved medieval Eastern Orthodox church in Nesebar, a town on the Black Sea coast of Burgas Province in eastern Bulgaria. It was most likely built in the 13th or 14th century and forms part of the Ancient Nesebar UNESCO World Heritage Site. The Church of Saint Paraskevi features a single nave and a pentagonal apse as well as rich exterior decoration. Its dome and the belfry surmounting the narthex have not been preserved today, and it is unknown which of the three saints named Paraskevi it was dedicated to. |
- Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, Ireland, built c. 1030
- St. Margaret's Chapel, built in the 11th century, possibly the oldest church building in Scotland
- Saviour Cathedral, Ukraine, built in the 1030s
- Saint Sophia Cathedral, Ukraine, built in the 1030s
- Saint Cyril's Monastery, Ukraine, founded in 1140
- Arkhyz churches, Russia, 10th to 13th centuries
- Novgorod Cathedral, Russia, built between 1045 and 1050
- Old Aker Church is a medieval church located in Oslo. An active parish, the church is the oldest existing building in Oslo from 1080.
- Church of the Holy Sepulchre, rebuilt in 1089, in Jerusalem is venerated as Golgotha, where Jesus was crucified, and is said also to contain the place where Jesus was buried ,
- Church of St. Adalbert, Kraków, Kraków, Poland, built in the 11th century, possibly the oldest church building in Poland
- Saint Sophia Cathedral in Polotsk, Belarus, 18th-century building with an 11th-century apse
- Abbey of Romainmôtier: a 5th-century church was rebuilt in the 7th century, and again between 990 and 1030. The church building remained mostly unchanged since the 11th century, and qualifies as one of the oldest romanesque buildings in Switzerland.
- Lund Cathedral, built in 1123, Possibly the oldest church in Sweden
- St. Mary's Cathedral, Limerick, Ireland, founded in 1168.
- St. Peter's Church, Hamburg & St. Nicholas' Church, Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany, Building Started 1189 but were rebuilt several times due to fire & war but still stand in their original positions today.
- St. Audoen's Church, Dublin, Ireland, founded in 1190.
- St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, Ireland, founded in 1191.
- Church of Saint George, Lalibela, Ethiopia, Built in the 12th century, one of the oldest church buildings in Ethiopia
- Church of St. Panteleimon, built in the 12th century, One of the oldest church buildings in Macedonia
- Kalozha Church, the oldest extant church building in Belarus, 12th century.
- Church of Kish, the oldest extant Caucasian Albanian church building in Azerbaijan, 12th or 13th century.
- Basilica of Saint Servatius, church congregation dating to 384 AD, current building built from 11th to 13th centuries, oldest congregation and possibly the oldest church building in the Netherlands
- Thiruvithamcode Arappally Kanyakumari District is the oldest Church building that still exists in India.
- St. Canice's Cathedral, Kilkenny, Ireland, built between 1202 and 1285.
- St. Nicholas Church, Vilnius, Lithuania, is the oldest surviving church in Lithuania. Originally built in the 14th century.
- Hvalsey Church, located in Hvalsey, Greenland, Kingdom of Denmark, is the oldest surviving church in the Americas. Originally built in the 14th century as a Catholic church, although archaeology suggests it was constructed on the site of a previous church.
- Trondenes Church, is the northernmost medieval stone church of Norway and the world's northernmost surviving medieval building. Finished and opened in 1435.
Early Modern
- St. Francis Church, Kochi, India, built 1504–1516, oldest European church building in India
- Catedral de Santa María la Menor, commissioned by Pope Julius II in 1504, and built 1514–1540. It is the oldest church in the Americas and the oldest church building in the Dominican Republic
- St. Paul's Church, Malacca, Malaysia, built in 1521 as a Roman Catholic chapel and finally abandoned in 1753. It is the oldest known church building in Malaysia
- Cathedral of San Juan Bautista, Puerto Rico, built in 1521, oldest church building in the United States
- Chapel of Ermita del Rosario, Mexico, built in 1523, oldest chapel in Mexico
- The church of La Balbanera, Ecuador, was constructed in 1534, making it the oldest church constructed by the Spaniards in Ecuador
- Chapel of San Jacinto, Guatemala, founded in 1524, one of the oldest churches in Guatemala
- Franciscan Chapel of the Red Cross, Jamaica, built in 1525, one of the oldest Spanish cathedrals in the New World
- St. Dominic's Church, Macau, China, built in 1527 by three Dominican Priests
- Church of Saints Cosme and Damião, built in 1535, in the city of Igarassu, Pernambuco. Brazil's oldest church.
- Cebu Metropolitan Cathedral, Cebu, Philippines established in 1565, previously named as the Church of St. Vitales and is the first church erected in the Philippines.
- Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral, built 1574–1813, one of the oldest churches in Mexico
- Old West Kirk, Greenock, 1591, the first Protestant church built in Scotland post Reformation
- Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Beijing, founded in 1604, possibly the oldest continuous church congregation in China
- San Agustin Church, Manila, built in 1607, one of the oldest church buildings in the Philippines.
- First Jamestown Church, 1607, first Protestant church in what would become the USA
- San Miguel Mission, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA, built in 1610, oldest church building in the continental U.S.
- Ruins of St. Paul's, China, built in 1627
- St. James Church, Barbados, founded 1627, oldest congregation in Barbados
- St. Luke's Church, USA, built in 1682
- Jamestown Church,
- Old Ship Church, USA, built in 1681
- Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, Quebec City, built 1687–1723, later extensively rebuilt, Possibly the oldest church building in Canada
- Zion Church, Jakarta, Indonesia, the church was built in 1695, the oldest standing church structure in the city.
- Cathedral of San Fernando, San Antonio, Texas, USA, built between 1738 and 1750, the oldest cathedral sanctuary in the United States
- St. Paul's Church, built 1750, Possibly the oldest Protestant church building in Canada
- Blenduk Church, built in 1753 complete with a Baroque Organ from the 18th century, it is the oldest church in Central Java, Indonesia.
- Christ Church Melaka, built in 1753 as a Dutch Reformed church, it now houses an Anglican congregation. It is the oldest Protestant church building in Malaysia
- Mission San Diego de Alcalá, built in 1769 by Junipero Serra, is a functioning Roman Catholic church and the oldest in California. It sits at the base of El Camino Real, the road going northward in California that is punctuated by missions about a day's walk apart.
- St. Anne's Church, constructed by the Portuguese in 1792, built in European and Gothic styles, one of the oldest Churches in South India, in Virajpet, Coorg.
- Her Majesty's Royal Chapel of the Mohawks, constructed in 1785 for the Mohawk people led by Joseph Brant, first Protestant church in Upper Canada
- Church of the Holy Ascension, USA, built in 1826, oldest church building in Alaska
- Armenian Church, Singapore, built 1835, oldest church in Singapore
- Mokuaikaua Church, USA, built in 1837, oldest church congregation and building in Hawaii
- Christ Church Royal Chapel, established in 1784, built in 1843 by the Mohawk people to symbolise their alliance with the British Crown
- Saigon Notre-Dame Basilica, Possibly oldest church building in Vietnam, built 1863–1880
- Ōura Church, built in 1864, Possibly the oldest church building in Japan
- Wanchin Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, Taiwan, built in 1870, oldest chapel in Taiwan
- Myeongdong Cathedral, built between 1892–1898, Oldest church building in South Korea
- Living Water Church, built 1909, One of the Oldest Pentecostal Church buildings in the World. Built 3 years after Azusa St. Revival in San Francisco, 1906