Tourist information - Stockholm
Stockholm is the capital city as well as seaport of Sweden, around the eastern coast of the country, where Lake Mälaren enters the Baltic Sea. It is usually the capital of Stockholm County. Stockholm is found on about 20 islands and the nearby mainland and is the largest city and the leading commercial, manufacturing, financial, transportation, and cultural center of Sweden. Primary manufactures consist of printed materials, electrical equipment, processed food, machinery, metal products, paper, chemicals, textiles, and clothing. Government operations, tourism, as well as shipbuilding are as well important to the city's economic base.
Stockholm is renowned for its great beauty; it has a lot of waterways and much parkland and is sometimes called the Venice of the North. It is the seat of the University of Stockholm (1877); the Royal Institute of Technology (1827); the College of Fine Arts (1735); schools of music, economics, medicine, and physical education; the Royal Library; the Nobel Foundation (1900), which oversees the awarding of Nobel Prizes; and the Swedish Academy (1786). One of many museums in the city are the Swedish Museum of Natural History; the National Museum, with massive collections of paintings, sculpture, drawings, and prints; the Contemporary Art Museum; the National Museum of Science and Technology; the Ethnographical Museum of Sweden, with a collection of artifacts from around the world; and the National Maritime Museum, with displays associated with Swedish naval and merchant-marine history.
Other points of interest include the Royal Palace (completed 1754), the 13th-century Church of Saint Nicholas, or Storkyrkan (Great Church), and the 17th-century Riddarhuset (Hall of Nobles), all within the island of Städsholmen; Riddarholm Church (started late 13th century), in which most of Sweden's monarchs are usually buried, around the island of Riddarholmen; and the House of Parliament, on the island of Helgeandsholmen. Also of note are the Stadshuset (City Hall), designed by the Swedish architect Ragnar Östberg and established between 1911 and 1923, and the zoo and open-air museum in Skansen, a popular park. Among the many performing-arts institutions that are supported by the city of Stockholm are the Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, the Royal Dramatic Theater, and the Royal Ballet.
Although the area had long been populated, Stockholm wasn't established until the mid-13th century. This settlement developed as a trading center after commercial ties were established with cities that were members of the Hanseatic League (a commercial federation of European cities), particularly Lübeck. In 1520 the coronation of Christian II, king of Denmark and Norway, as king of Sweden took place here. To strengthen his position in Sweden, Christian had a number of Swedish noblemen killed during what has been called the Stockholm Massacre. Three years later Danish dominate was overthrown, and Gustav I Vasa turned king of Sweden, with Stockholm as the center of his kingdom. The city became a renowned cultural center in the 17th century, and its main growth as an industrial community began about 1850. The 1912 Olympic Games were held in Stockholm.
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