Åkerö Manor

Åkerö Manor (Åkerö slott) is a manor house in Södermanland, Sweden. Although an estate with a history going back to the Middle Ages, the presently visible manor house complex was commissioned in 1748 (completed in 1752-1757) by Carl Gustaf Tessin (1695-1770) and designed by Carl Hårleman. It is a fine example of Rococo manor house architecture in Sweden. [1][2]

Åkerö Manor
Sweden
Åkerö Manor, view from Lake Yngaren
Åkerö Manor
Coordinates58.8930556°N 016.5711111°E / 58.8930556; 016.5711111
TypeCastle
Site history
Built1752-57 (present building)
Built byCarl Gustaf Tessin
Aerial view of Åkerö

History

The estate is one of the oldest in Södermanland, dating from the 13th century. It was first mentioned in 1281. During the 16th century, the owners at the time, the Bielke family, erected a renaissance manor house. During that time, from 1540 to 1590, it belonged to Anna Bielke. In 1660, about a hundred years later, the building was damaged by fire and never completely restored.[3]

In 1748 Carl Gustaf Tessin bought the estate. He ordered the old, damaged buildings to be demolished and commissioned a new building to be built to the designs by Carl Hårleman (it was built in 1752-1757). Louis-Joseph Le Lorrain was commissioned to design the interiors..[3]

gollark: no.
gollark: > NB: 'just run off the bottom of the screen and keep going' is not an official strategy, it only arises from a bug in the osmarks.tk implementation. The original Emu War code prevents trying to run off the edge of the screen, but osmarks forgot to update these when he updated the gamefield size, foolishly assuming that the variables for gamefield size actually controlled the other relevant bits.
gollark: No! That picture is being used out of context!
gollark: It even says so at the top of the page.
gollark: Hey, how come you added a strategy which is explicitly just a bug exploit?

See also

  • List of castles in Sweden

References

  1. "Carl Hårleman". Svenskt biografiskt handlexikon. Retrieved September 1, 2019.
  2. "Carl-Gustaf Tessin". Åkerö. Retrieved September 1, 2019.
  3. "Åkerös historia". Åkerö Säteri. Retrieved 10 November 2013.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.