Kungliga begravningsplatsen

Kungliga begravningsplatsen, known in English as the Royal Cemetery, was first used in 1922 and has been the only official burial place of the Swedish Royal Family since 1950, succeeding Riddarholm Church as such. It takes up all of the small island of Karlsborg in the bay of Brunnsviken. The cemetery is part of the popular Haga Park in Solna, Sweden.

The bridge and gates to the cemetery in Haga Park

The little bridge from the mainland's park to the island and the large cruciform monument by the highest grave were designed by Ferdinand Boberg.

Burials

Buried at the cemetery

Family buried elsewhere (since 1922)

Public access

The island and the public areas of Haga Park are part of Solna's and Stockholm's protected Royal National City Park area. That large park itself is public, open year-round for visitors at no charge; the cemetery is open for visitors May–August (Thursdays 1 P.M. to 3 P.M.).[1]

gollark: It's wireless.
gollark: Just duct tape half your 64GB RAM kit to the GPU.
gollark: Look, just ask for advice on r/buildapc, the cool subreddit, or duct tape bigger RAM chips to the 1660 Ti.
gollark: …
gollark: Anyway, it's not minor improvements; maybe 10% IPC improvements and possibly 10% or so clock improvements from the 7nm process, plus lower power.

References


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