Bragdøya

Bragdøya is an island in Kristiansand municipality in Agder county, Norway. The 0.7-square-kilometre (0.27 sq mi) island is in the archipelago in the Kristiansandsfjorden, just south of the city of Kristiansand. The island is surrounded by the smaller islands of Svensholmen and Langøya to the north (across the narrow Bragdøyrenna strait) and the island of Hestehaue to the southeast. The heavily populated island of Andøya lies to the southwest.

Bragdøya
Bragdøya as seen from the west
Bragdøya
Location of the island
Bragdøya
Bragdøya (Norway)
Geography
LocationAgder, Norway
Coordinates58.1178°N 08.0014°E / 58.1178; 08.0014
Area0.7 km2 (0.27 sq mi)
Length1.5 km (0.93 mi)
Width600 m (2,000 ft)
Coastline5.3 km (3.29 mi)
Highest elevation35 m (115 ft)
Administration
Norway
CountyAgder
MunicipalityKristiansand
Demographics
Population0 (2015)

Bragdøya has been owned by the municipality of Kristiansand since 1969 when they bought it with a government grant as a public open space. It was purchased with the requirement that the islands would be a recreational space for the city. During the summer, the island is used as grazing land for sheep.

History

For centuries, Bragdøya has been inhabited. "Siffuord Bragdøen" is mentioned in written sources as owner from 1610 and onwards. The first manor house in Kristiansand was built in Bragdøya around 1770 for the family of Henrik Arnold Thaulow. Thaulow was the grandfather of Oscar Wergeland, Henrik Wergeland, and Camilla Collett, and his grandchildren spent time on the island during the summers. There are several older cottages on the island.

In 1915, two large warehouses were built on the west side of Bragdøya where mackerel was salted and packed for export. The business did not go particularly well, however, and in the interwar period the business was ended.

The Nazi German occupiers committed executions of at least 28 Soviet POWs on Bragdøya during World War II.[1]

Leisure

Bragdøya Kystlag, a voluntary association which aims to preserve local maritime culture along the coast, is now the owner of the warehouse complex named Bragdøya Coastal Heritage Centre. From 1996-2012, the centre hosted an annual blues festival. On some days there are organized boat trips to the island. There is a special boat from the city centre of Kristiansand during the Norwegian school holidays which makes a round trip of Bragdøya and several other islands.[2][3]

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gollark: Well, if you have a sufficiently powerful theorem prover, you can derive the result that *your* God is dead by induction from the known dead one.
gollark: Ah, of course.

References

  1. "Sovjetiske krigsfanger" (in Norwegian). Arkivet Foundation.
  2. "Timetables, year-round service boats to Bragdøya" (in Norwegian). Bragdøya Kystlag. Archived from the original on 2016-05-09. Retrieved 2016-04-18.
  3. "Summerboat to Bragdøya". VisitNorway.com.
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