Wednesday, 19 March 2008
Let's Start Here! (Stockholm, Sweden)
Architectural Scenes! (Stockholm, Sweden)
Storkyrkan Church (Stockholm, Sweden)
From the guide book: "Storkyrkan was first mentioned in a written source dated 1279, and became a Lutheran Protestant church in 1527. The parish church since the Middle Ages of the Nikolai parish, covering the whole island on which the Old Town stands, it has also been the cathedral of Stockholm since the Diocese of Stockholm was broken out from the Archdiocese of Uppsala and the Diocese of Strängnäs in 1942. The last Swedish king to be crowned here was Oscar II in 1873."
The Changing of the Guard -- Swedish Style (Stockholm, Sweden)
The Weather! (Stockholm, Sweden)
Shopping (and my new camera)!! (Stockholm, Sweden)
Things that happen when... (Stockholm, Sweden)
A Three Way View! (Stockholm, Sweden)
Sun. (Stockholm, Sweden)
Vasa Museum! (Stockholm, Sweden)

First, from the guidebook: "Vasa is a warship that was built for Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden from 1626 to 1628. The ship foundered and sank after sailing less than a nautical mile (2 km) into her maiden voyage on August 10, 1628. The Vasa was relocated in the late 1950s and salvaged with a largely intact hull on April 24, 1961. The Vasa Museum was built to house her in 1987. The ship is one of Sweden's most popular tourist attractions and, as of 2007, has attracted more than 25 million visitors."
Okay, from me: This great ship. Its huge and so impressive. Double rows of canon decks (never heard of at the time), bright, colourful -- the flagship of Sweden. It sets sail on its maiden voyage. Its a gorgeous sunny day, calm smooth waters, cheering crowds to hail the launch -- and then barely out of the port of Stockholm, the ship takes on water, sinks -- killing the majority of her crew.
Its an unbelievable story. In 1961, the Vasa was raised in an incredible effort. In the museum, she is 95% original -- she's assembled, and in some instances you can even walk on her top deck! The only downfall, and its a small one, is that the museum is very dark (for preservation reasons) so its very hard to take a good photo.