The colorful Norwegian city of Bergen is also a gateway to majestic fjords. Bryggen Hanseatic Wharf will give you a sense of the local culture – take some time to snap photos of the Hanseatic commercial buildings, which look like scenery from a movie set. Don’t breathe too deeply when you visit the outdoor fish market, a reminder of the city’s role in early fish trade. Ferry across a fjord to Lysøen, where the former villa of 19th-century composer Ole Bull will captivate you with fairytale charm.
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4.5 based on 1,042 reviews
This wooden building is furnished in 18th-century style and gives visitors a feel of what Bergen was like in its medieval trading days. During a couple of years now, the City of Bergen is implementing a major restoration work. We tell you the Hanseatic story from Schøtstuene and Bryggen. Join us at Schøtstuene!
As the main merchant’s building where their exhibit hall is housed is closed for 6 years for renovations, this museum provides a guided walking tour of the Bryggen Wharf area and a building where the Germans gathered and several schoetstuene have been recreated. The fee for the tour includes entry to the Norwegian Fisheries Museum and a shuttle to and from it. The walking tour goes back through the tenements where the Germans lived and worked, and describes the living conditions at the time as well as the political and economic aspects. The Hanseatic League negotiated with the Norwegians for favored trading status and exchanged their grain for dried cod. They also brought in luxury goods such as furs, jewelry, marzipan. Their enclave on Bryggen Wharf was surrounded by a fence and no women were allowed inside. Only approved Norwegian traders were admitted. German boys came as apprentices at 12 or 13 for 6 years of training and did all the housekeeping and cooking as well as loading and storing goods. Our guide was excellent, a pleasant German woman with very clear English. She was quite knowledgeable, gave an overview as well as details and welcomed questions. The tour ended in the Schoetstuene where we were free to wander on our own through the building with its meeting rooms and kitchens.
4.5 based on 122 reviews
The Military Museum in Bergen and the Western part of Norway. Free entrance, and facilitated for disabled people. Exhibitions: The Resistance Movement in and around Bergen 1940-1945. Newspapers in Bergen / The Underground Press 1940-1945. The history of Bergenhus Fortress. Women's Contribution to the Armed Forces. Norwegian Forces abroad (peacekeeping operations etc.). Enigma.
Excellent free museum detailing some of Norway's military history, especially under Nazi occupation in WWII. Welcoming and helpful staff who was able to provide a lot of extra information. All exhibits have multiple language translations and are well laid-out. Free tea and coffee to top it off!
4.0 based on 483 reviews
At Bryggens Museum, you can experience the Middle Ages and see what archaeologists have found in excavations of Bryggen and other places in Western Norway. Bryggen in Bergen has been a busy part of the city for almost 1,000 years. In 1955, parts of Bryggen burned down. After this, excavations started and archaeologists found thick layers of soil containing hundreds of thousands of artefacts. Bryggens Museum has been built on top of the remains of Bergen’s oldest houses dating from the first half of the 12th century. One of the most special finds are the many pieces of wood with runic inscriptions with text ranging from everything from poems and gossip to conjurations. For children, the museum has a sensory room and a scavenger hunt. Closed: 01.-05.04, 01.05, 17.05, 24.05
We visited this museum as part of a walking tour of Bryggen and whilst we walked through the buildings and alleyways on the tour it was only through the museum that the place came alive. The museum houses artefacts which demonstrate how the original traders lived and worked there and exposes the very basic conditions they endured. Essential to visit whilst in Bergen but do it as part of a walking tour to gain the most benefit and understanding.
3.5 based on 263 reviews
Visit Hakon’s Hall this summer. We hold short introductions every hour to give you an impression of life behind the thick stone walls. Hakon’s Hall is over 750 years old and is packed with history. Through its golden age, decay and resurrection. The hall was built between 1247 and 1261 by King Hakon Hakonsson as a royal residence and banquet hall. This was important to the king as his own coronation ceremony was held in a big boat shed. It apparently rained a lot in Bergen even in the Middle Ages! When the King’s son, Magnus Hakonsson the Lawmender, married the Danish princess Ingeborg in 1261, tables were set for 2,000 persons in three different buildings. According to the sagas, ‘The Kings kept their courts in the stone hall’. At the time, Bergen was Norway’s biggest and most important city, and Hakon’s Hall was the scene of many important national political events. One of them was the formulation of Norway’s first collection of laws. 1.-5.04, 11., 21.04, 1., 8., 13., 17.05
I arrived just a few minutes before closing time and was blessed with an empty impressive hall with low-toned music emanating from above. It was truly magical ! I can only imagine what it must have been like hundreds of years ago. Felt like a Game of Thrones episode. Well worth a visit!
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