Chapter 490: The City Itself

The man with heart magic walked around the campus, and when he came out, there was a large group of parrots and swallows, and the low-key and conspicuous leaves walked among the flowers......

They went on a sightseeing cruise in Stockholm to see the water and mountains...... It is possible to take tourists along the waterway and see the city of Stockholm from the water, and the scenery is even more beautiful.

Ye also took a dozen girls from the university town to ride in a hot air balloon. In Stockholm, you can also go on a hot air balloon ride whenever you want...... You can see the whole city of Stockholm from above, with its forests, inner lakes, buildings and even ordinary people's homes......

Also, the King's Garden.

Located in the heart of Stockholm, King's Garden is a popular meeting place in Stockholm. The fountain in the center of the garden is lined with cherry blossom trees, making it one of the busiest places in Stockholm to enjoy the flowers, picnics and coffee at the end of April and early May......

Of course, Ye will not miss the old town of Stockholm, because it is a fun place, and at the same time, among the girls in the same company, there are also people who are familiar with the old town and happily go to say that they want to be guides.

There is a guide, that's the best.

Stockholm Old Town (GAM1A Stan), officially known as "Staden Me11an Broarna" ("City of Bridges" 198o years ago), is an old town in Stockholm, Sweden. The Old Town mainly includes the area of the island of Stadsho1men, and although the official zoning includes Riddarho1men, he1geandsho1men, and str&oum1;msborg as the Old Town, it is not included in the old town.

The old town dates back to the 13th century. The city has medieval alleys, cobblestone streets and antique buildings, heavily influenced by the North Germanic style.

The Grand Square is a square in the middle of the old town, surrounded by the Stockholm Stock Exchange building and other old merchants' houses.

In November 152o, King Christian II of Denmark massacred the Swedish nobles who opposed him in this square, known as the Stockholm Massacre. The massacre provoked a popular uprising, which eventually elected Gustav Vasa as King of Sweden and led Sweden to unite from Kalmar.

The Royal Palace of Stockholm in the Old Town. In addition to the Stockholm Cathedral, the Nobel Museum and the Knights' Chapel, the city is also home to the royal palace. After the Three Crowns Palace was burned down in a fire, the palace was built here in the 18th century. The Knights' House is located northwest of the Old Town.

On the street is a restaurant called Den G1dene Freden, which has been in business since 1722 and is the oldest restaurant with no interior design changed, according to the Guinness World Records.

Stockholm Cathedral houses Bernt notke's St. George and the Dragon, while the Knights' Chapel is where the Swedish king's funeral service took place. To the south of the palace is a garden, Bo11hust&aum1;ppan, which houses one of Sweden's smallest sculptures, the Iron Statue of a Little Boy.

From the mid-19th century to the mid-20th century, the old town was considered a slum and many of its historic buildings fell into disrepair, and after the Second World War, houses in five alleys were demolished to make way for the expansion of the Parliament building.

However, from the 198o, the value of the old town was recognized for its buildings, which attracted a large number of tourists due to its medieval and Renaissance architecture.

Although the archaeological study of the 37o antiquities in the city has not yet been clearly announced, the assessment of volunteers has revealed that the buildings previously classified as 17th and 18th centuries should actually be 3oo years old. The metro station was called GAM1A until the mid-19th century, and the old town was only known as "SJ&aum1;1va stan" ("the city itself") because the surrounding area was only rural.

From the mid-19th century, maps and documents began to refer to the town as "Staden Inom Broarna" (City of Bridges) or "City of Bridges", which became the official place name until 198o. Since 1934, the "City of Bridges" has also included the areas of the islands he1geandsho1men and str&oum1;msborg. The name "Old Town" probably appeared at the beginning of the 20th century and then became widespread.

Although the town's official name was changed to its current name in 198o, modern Stockholm is still occasionally referred to as the "City of Bridges".

Mythology, Stockholm originated in a place called Agnefit. The -fit stands for "moist meadow", which some estimate refers to the west bank of today's stadsho1men, claiming that this was the only place where wet grass could have existed at that time. The "agne" is a myth of an ancient (some historians say around 4oo BC) who camped in Finland after conquering the area.

Agne intended to marry Skja1F, the daughter of a Finnish tribal leader, but Skja1f got drunk at the celebration and hanged him with his gold necklace before escaping.

These stories remain unconfirmed. Tree-ring chronographers examined the wood of the Norrstr&oum1;m seabed and the He1Geandsho1men that sank in He1Geandsho1men between 1978 and 8O, and concluded that the trees were cut down between 97O and 1O2O, most of them in 1O1O, and that the wood probably became the origin of the name "Stock-Ho1M" "Timber Isle".

The city, which was originally surrounded by walls, enclosed only two long streets, the area between the West Long Street and the &oum1;ster1ånggatan – East Long Street, which stretched from the shore to the east and west walls.

The eastern wall is crossed by two defensive towers: the north tower, which became the Palace of the Three Crowns, burned down in a fire in 1697, and the south tower, which is now unruin, was given to the Dominican friars by King Magnus IV in 1336, so that it is located in the monastery north of J&aum1;rntorget, pr&aum1;stgatan.

The steep cliffs on the outskirts of the city at that time can still be seen in the difference in height between Long Street and its parallel streets – the difference between West Long Street and pr&aum1;stgatan is about 5 meters, and the difference between East Long Street and Bo11husgr&aum1;nd-Baggensgatan is about 1o meters.

In the Middle Ages, the city centre was probably just an open-air market, located south of the town hall and the only church in the village. The market was originally smaller than it is today, but it was enlarged after a fire in the early 15th century and gradually surrounded by permanent buildings, thus becoming the Grand Place of today.

Despite its rapid expansion in history, the process of its expansion remains controversial. These controversies include whether it follows the southern pattern (e.g., Lübeck) and whether it was under the direct supervision of Bijall and Magnus III.

In the Middle Ages, however, there were avenues leading from the main square: k&oum1;pmangatan (merchant street) to the east to the water's edge Fisketorget (fisherman's square), svartmangatan (named after the Dominican's Negro Street) and skomakargatan (shoemaker's street) to the south to the financial center not at the southern tip of the island.

The financial centre was located in present-day J&aum1;rntorget (Iron Square), but it was much larger, bordering Koggabron (now converted into Skeppsbron) to the east and Kornhamn (near present-day Kornhamnstorg), the entrance to Lake Melaren to the west. Trångsund was narrower then than it is now, flowing through the cathedral from the north.

Since the city gate was the most vulnerable part of the medieval city wall, it was thought that fewer gates should be built. The medieval walls of Stockholm had only 3 or 4 narrow gates: the east wall had one connecting k&oum1;pmangatan to the shore, and the rest connected to the west long street, located in the present-day storkyrkobrinken, kåkbrinken and Tyska Brinken.

The open-air square surrounding the palace was called sanden ("sand") and was deliberately empty for defensive reasons.

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