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The Domkirken (Cathedral) in Bergen, Norway, dates to the 12th Century. |
Conventional wisdom says to always carry your umbrella
when you are in Bergen, and on our recent trip to Norway in May, we were glad
we did. Unlike Oslo, where we had enjoyed warm, sunny weather, it was cool and cloudy
in Bergen with periods of rain. But that didn’t stop me from going out and
walking around the city.
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Our hotel and the colorful building fronts of Bryggen. |
Our hotel, the Radisson Royal Blu, where Art’s conference was being held, was
in the heart of Bryggen, the historic center of the city, now preserved as a
UNESCO Heritage site.
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Historic buildings of Bryggen. View from our room at our hotel. |
From medieval times through the late 1800s, Bergen
was the focus of trade on Norway’s west coast. Colorful storefronts facing the waterfront
were once busy offices and warehouses and other buildings connected to the shipping
business. Today they are restaurants and souvenir shops.
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Entrance to the Bergen Castle. |
Just beyond the warehouse district is the entrance to the old castle/fort and
its large ceremonial hall, the Hakenshallen, a structure dating back to the
1200s. The opening reception of Art’s conference was held there and we were
greeted by the mayor. It was not hard to imagine knights in armor dining in the
magnificent room long ago.
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Hakonshallen (ceremonial hall) |
My first job after arriving in Bergen was finding a laundromat to do our laundry. I learned that, like virtually
everything else, all the machines were operated by credit card. We had gone to
an ATM machine when we arrived in Norway and gotten cash (Norwegian kroners),
but almost never used it. Even the smallest purchases (like a cinnamon roll at the local bakery or the toilets at the train station) was paid for with a tap of a credit card.
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Spring flowers in the Bergen city park. |
Armed with a map picked up at the hotel, I took a
self-guided walking tour through the streets of Bryggen, then circling the city park, where strollers ambled down flowered paths and swans floated past a fountain in the center of lake.
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Swan in the lake at the Bergen city park. |
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Bandstand at the Festplaza. |
Tulips, rhododendrons, and all kinds of flowers were in the glory of the spring bloom, brightening the overcast weather. At one end of the park a bandstand was ready for summer concerts.
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Sample piece (from Brazil) in the Indigenous Histories exhibit at the Kode art museum in Bergen. |
Facing the park on one side are three of Bergen’s art
museums. One afternoon I met a friend for a visit to a fascinating exhibit
called Indigenous Histories. (For a virtual tour of some of the pieces in the
exhibit, go to my June 22, 2024 post my Art and Books blog.)
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At the main shopping plaza in downtown Bergen, a modern portico has been added to provide protection from rain or snow. Look carefully at the metal column and you can see multiple images of me with my camera. |
I then returned to the waterfront by walking through the business
district of downtown Bergen. There a wide plaza with memorial sculptures is flanked by commercial buildings dating from the 19th Century.
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A food stand at the fish market offered burgers made of salmon, whale, elk, and reindeer meat. |
In the fish market along the waterfront stalls were
filled with artfully arranged fish, caviar, and sausages made from reindeer,
whale, elk. There were also stalls with various cooked foods to go. (I didn't try any.) The fish market seemed to be more of a tourist draw than a place where
locals went to purchase seafood to cook at home.
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White building at end of the street is the beginning of the Floibanen Funicular. |
A popular attraction in Bergen is the funicular, a
skyride that whisks you up from town to the mountain overlooking the city
for a spectacular view. But on the day I planned to do it, it was raining and the
clouds were so thick that I knew it would be impossible to see anything from
the viewpoint. So, instead, I went to the archeology museum next to our hotel and joined a one hour tour.
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Trade routes from Bergen in the Middle Ages. |
In the Middle Ages, Bergen was a transportation hub, sending ships to ports in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America.
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Layers of history revealed in the archeology museum. |
Over the centuries the wooden buildings of Bryggen burned many times and were rebuilt many times. As archeologists dig through the
layers of remains they have uncovered evidence of life going back to medieval
times. In the museum there were displays of ancient shoes, combs, tools, knitting needles and more--even a communal wooden toilet seat! I was particularly fascinated by the display of wooden sticks covered in
runic writing.
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The Futhark are ancient writing systems used by the Old Norse people of Northern Europe. |
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Both sides are carved with Runic inscriptions. "Hakon carved me, but the boy owns me." and "Bard owns me. He found much to object to in the person who carved me." |
And on our last morning, after the conference was over
Art and I did a tour of another museum in Bryggen, which introduced us
to life in Hanseatic times. (Bergen was a member of the Hanseatic League, a confederation of German city/states involved in trade in the 14th to 16th centuries. Norway did not become an independent country until 1905.) We then checked out of our hotel and made our way
to the ferry building to board the ship for our overnight trip to Alesund. As the
ship steamed out of the harbor, the sky cleared and the sun came out as we said
good-bye to Bergen. We no longer needed our umbrellas. |
Leaving the harbor and the cloudy skies of Bergen. |
For more about our ferry trip from Bergen to Alesund go to my post of May 27, 2024, Two Weeks in Norway: Trains, Planes, and Automobiles, and a Few Ferries, Too.And for an overview of our three days in Oslo, go to my post of June 17, 2024, Oslo, Three Days in May: Opera, Art, History and Sunshine.
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The Bryggen waterfront, historic buildings, with the addition of a modern Ferris Wheel, constructed while we were there, perhaps in preparation for the summer tourist season. |
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