Norðragøta

Norðragøta, also just referred to as Gøta (Danish: Nordregøte), is a village on Eysturoy, Faroe Islands.

Norðragøta
Village
Norðragøta in October 2004
Norðragøta
Location in the Faroe Islands
Coordinates: 62°12′3″N 6°44′27″W
State Kingdom of Denmark
Constituent country Faroe Islands
IslandEysturoy
MunicipalityEysturkommuna
Population
 (1 January 2007)
  Total567
Time zoneGMT
  Summer (DST)UTC+1 (EST)
Postal code
FO 512
ClimateCfc

Overview

The famous Faroese singer Eivør Pálsdóttir posing in national costume in front of the museum Blásastova in Gøta.

The municipality of Gøta (Gøtu kommuna) was a municipality until 1 January 2009 when it merged with Leirvík into Eysturkommuna. Gøta consists also of the villages Gøtueiði, Gøtugjógv and Syðrugøta. The village lies on Eysturoy's east coast at the bottom of the inlet Gøtuvík. There is a museum called Gøtu Fornminnisavn with the famous house Blásastova. The wooden church in the centre of the village is from 1833.

Gøta is a place of great importance in the history of the Faroe Islands. One of the key figures in the Icelandic saga, Færeyinga saga, called Tróndur Gøtuskegg (Old Norse: Þrǫ́ndr í Gǫtu) lived here. Trondur (also called Tróndur í Gøtu) was a heathen Viking-chief who ruled all of the islands for a period of time. In the saga Tróndur is represented as the "bad guy" while the "good guy" is Sigmundur Brestisson. Sigmundur Christianised the Faroe Islands for the King of Norway.

Sports

The most popular pastime in Norðragøta is football. The local football team is Víkingur Gøta, formerly known as Gøtu Ítróttarfelag. They play their home games at the Serpugerði Stadium.

Music

Gøta is home to G! Festival, one of the largest music festivals in the Faroe Islands.

Faroese stamps showing Norðragøta

Old houses in Norðragøta

Issued on 5 October 1992, the artist was Jákup Pauli Gregoriussen.

Church of Gøta

The new church of Gøta, issued: 23 September 2002. These were also the Christmas stamps for that year.

Text on stamps.fo:

gollark: oh no.
gollark: It's, what, dynamically typed and... statically... traited, right?
gollark: Also, dynamic typing.
gollark: It does not actually exist. I can't run it.
gollark: I don't do stuff which requires more performance than "common stuff completes in under a few tens of milliseconds", so honestly I'd prefer a GCed language like OCaml over Rust, except Rust actually has good libraries and tooling.

See also

  • List of towns in the Faroe Islands
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