Svanøya

Svanøy (also called Svanøyna and Brulandet) is an island in the municipality of Kinn in Vestland county, Norway. The island is located in the Sunnfjord district of the county. The island lies just to the west of the mainland, in the mouth of the Førdefjorden. The Brufjorden runs along the north and east sides of the island and the Stavfjorden runs along the south side of the island. The island of Askrova lies about 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) northwest of Svanøy. The 10-square-kilometre (3.9 sq mi) island of Svanøy is heavily forested with many hills and small mountains. On Svanøy, there are plants and trees that usually are not found on the west coast of Norway, such as holly. The 235-metre (771 ft) tall mountain Vågsfjellet is the highest mountain on the island.[1] The boat to Florø runs several times every day from Svanøybukt.

Cross of St. Olaf (in 1912)
Svanøy / Brulandet
View of Svanøy in the 1850s
Svanøy / Brulandet
Location of the village
Svanøy / Brulandet
Svanøy / Brulandet (Norway)
Geography
LocationVestland, Norway
Coordinates61.4865°N 5.0754°E / 61.4865; 5.0754
Length10.3 km (6.4 mi)
Highest elevation235 m (771 ft)
Highest pointVågsfjellet
Administration
CountyVestland
MunicipalityKinn Municipality
Demographics
Population42 (2001)
Pop. density9.1/km2 (23.6/sq mi)

History

A stone cross was erected at Brandsøy on the mainland in honor of St. Olaf, and later it was moved to the island. There is a sacrificial place from the Viking Age on the north-east side of the island. The Viking, Eirik Bloodaxe, was allegedly born on the island. The island was historically called Brulandet, and it is now called Svanøy. The name comes from the Bishop Hans Svane who owned the main farm and manor on the island from 16621685. Since that time, it has been known as Svanøy (lit. "the island of Svane"), although Brulandet is still one of the official names of the island. Bru Church was located on the island from the 12th century until the 1872, serving the Bru parish (named after the old name for the island). In 1872, the church was torn down and the new Stavang Church was built on the mainland to serve the parish.[1]

gollark: It's definitely possible to set a handler for signals or something.
gollark: How come *instruction sets* come under intellectual property law, anyway?
gollark: Oh, never mind, I don't think the actual CPU is open source, just the instruction set.
gollark: Oh, do you want one process to ~~respond to~~ do something when it gets signals from another?
gollark: If I wanted an open source CPU and had bucketloads of money I would just buy RaptorCS things.

See also

References

  1. Store norske leksikon. "Svanøy" (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2013-11-05.


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