[3] The church was subsequently left more or less unchanged, with only some furnishings – notably, the carved wooden pulpit (1637) – being added later.
[1] The renovation was considered remarkable at the time, and led to the church being called the "national shrine of Gotland".
The tower, which reaches over 50 metres (160 ft) is adorned with galleries, an influence of art from the Rhine valley[3] and topped with a form of spire known as a Rhenish helm.
The main portal, on the south façade, is decorated with carved stone sculptures with motifs unusual for Gotland (14th century).
In the wall adjacent to the northern portal, a tombstone originating from the earlier stone church has been immured.
A niche intended to house the bread and wine of the Eucharist, is actually a surviving fragment from the earlier, Romanesque church.