The earliest existing historical records of the church date back to the year 1341, but the church was not new that year. The church in Follebu is a stone church that was built from 1260 to 1300. It is a rectangular Gothic structure. Stone churches in the Oppland region were quite rare in the middle ages, but Gausdal had two stone churches built in the 13th century and both have survived to this day. The church is not huge, but the walls are very thick: 1.75 metres (5 ft 9 in) in the west wall and approximately 1.55 metres (5 ft 1 in) in the other walls. This gives an interior floor area of about 14 by 7.65 metres (45.9 ft × 25.1 ft). The internal height along the wall is about 6.4 metres (21 ft). The altar and the pulpit have rich acanthus ornamentation created by Eistein Kjørn.[3] There is a cemetery around the church. In 1686, a small sacristy was built just off the choir. In 1868, the old sacristy was torn down and a new, larger sacristy was built to replace it. In 1872, a church porch was built as the main entrance to the building.[4][5]
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Parish
The Follebu parish was incorporated into Gausdal Municipality on 1 January 1838 after the Formannskapsdistrikt law went into effect. Gausdal was divided into the separate municipalities of Vestre Gausdal and Østre Gausdal in 1879, but they were reunited into one municipality in 1962. The database for Norske Gaardnavne Vol IV published in 1900 contains Gårdsnummer 1-32 for Follebu Parish in Østre Gausdal municipality. The Matrikkelutkastet av 1950 lists Gårdsnummer 119-150 for Gausdal municipality because all of the Gårdsnummer in Østre Gausdal were increased by 118 to eliminate duplication with the Vestre Gausdal Gårdsnummer when the two municipalities were reunited.