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framhöll

Framhöll is a historical term used in Old Norse and Icelandic sources to denote the fore-hall or front hall of a large house or hall complex. The word combines fram- “front, fore” with höfll/hǫll “hall.” In the architecture of chieftains’ residences and royal halls, framhöll functioned as an antechamber or reception area immediately inside the entrance, often separated from the main audience hall by a screen or partition. It served to greet visitors, perform ritual salutations, display status, and manage access to the central space.

Layout and features varied; framhölls were typically smaller than the main hall and located at the building’s

Attestation is primarily literary: the term appears in saga literature and diplomatic texts, and is discussed

In modern Icelandic, framhöll is a historical term; commonly the space is described more generally as a

front
or
near
the
entrance.
They
might
contain
seating,
ceremonial
objects,
or
guards,
and
could
be
used
to
hold
guests
before
they
were
admitted
to
the
hall
proper
for
feasting
or
council.
in
studies
of
Norse
architectural
practice.
Physical
remains
of
framhöll-like
spaces
are
inferred
from
the
remnants
of
longhouses
and
royal
halls,
though
precise
identifications
are
often
debated.
The
concept
is
useful
for
understanding
how
Norse
buildings
organized
space
and
social
ritual,
separating
a
ceremonial
fore-space
from
the
central
gathering
hall.
reception
area
or
antechamber
in
contemporary
discussions
of
medieval
architecture.