Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised May 26, 2026

Katarina Church

Katarina kyrka is a church in central Stockholm, Sweden. The original building was constructed 1656–1695. It has been rebuilt twice after being destroyed by fires, the second time in the 1990s. The Katarina-Sofia borough is named after Katarina Parish and the neighbouring parish of Sofia.

Last revised
May 26, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
259 w
Citations
Source
Katarina kyrka
January 2013 view of Katarina kyrka from outside
Religion
AffiliationChurch of Sweden
RiteLutheran
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusParish church
Year consecrated1724
Location
LocationStockholm, Sweden
Map
Interactive map of Katarina kyrka
Coordinates59°19′01″N 18°04′41″E / 59.31694°N 18.07806°E / 59.31694; 18.07806
Architecture
StyleBaroque
Groundbreaking1656
Completed1695

Katarina kyrka (Church of Catherine) is a church in central Stockholm, Sweden. The original building was constructed 1656–1695. It has been rebuilt twice after being destroyed by fires, the second time in the 1990s. The Katarina-Sofia borough is named after Katarina Parish and the neighbouring parish of Sofia.

Construction of the church started during the reign of Charles X Gustav of Sweden, and the church is named after Princess Catherine, mother of the king, wife of John Casimir, Palsgrave of Pfalz-Zweibrücken and half-sister of Gustavus Adolphus. The original architect was Jean de la Vallée.

In 1723 the church was completely destroyed in a major fire. It was rebuilt with a larger, octagonal tower.

On 17 May 1990, the church burned down again, leaving almost nothing remaining but the external walls. A rebuilt church reopened in 1995 with a new organ built by J. L. van den Heuvel Orgelbouw.

Notable people buried in the cemetery surrounding the church include the assassinated Foreign Minister Anna Lindh, the Dutch-Swedish singer Cornelis Vreeswijk, football player Sven Bergqvist, rapper Einár, and Sten Sture the Elder.

The van den Heuvel pipe organ source ↗
See also

See also

The new altar source ↗
References

References

External links

59°19′01″N 18°04′41″E / 59.31694°N 18.07806°E / 59.31694; 18.07806