Visit Karlskrona - Blekinge Museum
Visit Karlskrona and ArrivalGuides is proud to announce a release of its very first destination guide featuring travel videos in the Points-of-Interest of popular attractions, sights, restaurants and much more.
Blekinge museum: John Linds sidenklänning
Finns på Blekinge museums magasin Rosenholm
English subtitles
Det gamla dockhuset @ BLEKINGE MUSEUM - 190214 - KARLSKRONA - Blekinge
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Det gamla dockhuset @ BLEKINGE MUSEUM - 2019-02-14 - KARLSKRONA - Blekinge (Christian Hylse) - iPhone SE
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Blekinge museum: Jaktkanot
Finns på Blekinge museums magasin Rosenholm
Blekinge museum: Krucifixet från Mjällby
Finns på Blekinge museums magasin Rosenholm
Visit to Marinmuseum, Karlskrona Sweden
Today we are visiting Marinmuseum in Karlskrona. The goal of the video is to show you the submarine exhibition. You get to follow me into Neptun, a Swedish submarine from 1979.
Read more about the submarine exhibition here:
The video I was talking about where the diver almost is hit by a ship:
More at my Swedish blog medietac.com
Blekinge museum: Postdiligens
Finns på Blekinge museums magasin Rosenholm
Blekinge museum: Begravningsvagnen från Kyrkhult
Finns på Blekinge museums magasin Rosenholm
Marinmuseum / Vlog / Karlskrona / Sweden
Marinmuseum / Vlog
Hej ni får följa med mig en heldag i Marinmuseum i Karlskrona, hoppas ni gillar videon, så syns vi i nästa video :D
Music:
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Amiralitetskyrkan Karlskrona Blekinge
Se en film om kyrkan.
Producerad av Kyrkoguiden.se på uppdrag av Lunds stift.
Textbearbetning, inläsning, foto och produktion: Christer Smedberg.
Källor:
Webb: Riksantikvarieämbetets bebyggelseregister.
Bok: ”990 kyrkor från Skåne i söder till Lappland i norr”. Beatrice och Gösta Glase. ISBN 91-7988-142-4
Bok: ”Blekinges kyrkor”. Lasse Larsson 2010. ISBN 978-91-86560-81-2
Folder: ”Amiralitetskyrkan Ulrica Pia”.
Blekinge Museum, Gribshunden seminar, 2015: Niklas Eriksson (Södertörns högskola/MARIS)
Gribshunden (or Griffen), sunk in 1495, is possibly the best preserved 15th century warship in the world. Probably built in the Netherlands with timber from France, used by the Danish king on travels to England, Norway and Sweden, it is truly an international shipwreck. Since it is carvel built, it can also give important clues to the ship building techniques used by the great explorers, Columbus and Vasco da Gama.
A Gribshunden seminar took place in Ronneby, Sweden in November 2015. The aim of the seminar was to present current stage of investigation of the shipwreck. Blekinge museum and the county administrative board of Blekinge invited researchers, conservators and archaeologists from different parts of Europe to share their research and their view on Gribshunden.
Gribshunden (1495): Ship archaeological analysis, Niklas Eriksson
During the surveys of Gribshunden we found a unique ship, in the archaeological sense, and as an entity of its own time. The ship was constructed during the transition from the medieval period to the early modern era. Characteristic for this time was the arising of a new power ideology that was materialized in structures that would signal the centralization of the monarchy. The ship Gribshunden can be regarded as such a structure. This kind of ship was one of the first merely constructed for warfare. It’s also important as an archaeological site and artifact, as it brings forth new historical knowledge on the geographical area and current period. It was used during a quite limited and short time span.
The surveys conducted have in large been non-intrusive one, where the aim has been not disturb the site. They were carried out by recording the site from the surface and measurements and sketches underneath the surface. By combining this information we made a preliminary plan of action. Gribshunden is very well preserved and we were able to record the outlines of the ship and to separate the different parts from one another. Some parts revealed methods of construction, the carvel, and the distribution of guns, the gunwale, and other features connected to warfare. The best preserved part of the ship is the forecastle, where the figurehead was found. By combining the findings with written sources and paintings from the 15th century we can make an assessment of potential findings. For example, there exists a painting of the same type of ship as Gribshunden, which displays two figureheads in the forecastle. Perhaps this will be a feature likely to discover.
Med båt i Karlskrona skärgård
Med båt i Karlskrona skärgård
Blekinge museum, Gribshunden seminar 2015: Ingvar Sjöblom and Johan Rönnby
Gribshunden (or Griffen), sunk in 1495, is possibly the best preserved 15th century warship in the world. Probably built in the Netherlands with timber from France, used by the Danish king on travels to England, Norway and Sweden, it is truly an international shipwreck. Since it is carvel built, it can also give important clues to the ship building techniques used by the great explorers, Columbus and Vasco da Gama.
A Gribshunden seminar took place in Ronneby, Sweden in November 2015. The aim of the seminar was to present current stage of investigation of the shipwreck. Blekinge museum and the county administrative board of Blekinge invited researchers, conservators and archaeologists from different parts of Europe to share their research and their view on Gribshunden.
Gribshunden in the archives - research: Ingvar Sjöblom (Swedish Defence University), presentation: Johan Rönnby (MARIS)
One of the most interesting research methods is when archaeological findings can be supplemented by their contemporary written sources. For this presentation Ingvar Sjöblom has compiled medieval texts regarding the ship Gribshunden and discussing them in their historical context.
Gribshunden is mentioned as the Griffen in the 15th century sources. It occurs four different times between the years 1486 and 1493 as a royal naval ship. The Griffen and the other ships on the list of the fleet are early examples of the evolving modern state. During this period in time the ships belonged to king Hans of Denmark (1455-1513). He endured a century with ongoing turbulence among the Scandinavian countries. When Gribshunden capsized in 1495 it was on its way to Kalmar, and a royal meeting between king Hans and the Swedish king Sten Sture (1440-1503). Five different authors describe the event on how it sank outside of Ronneby. One of the authors, Tyge Krabbe was an eyewitness, a passenger on the ship. He tells us that the king was not onboard the ship and that most of the passengers died in the explosion.
The ship was found outside the island of Ekö, in the archipelago of Ronneby, like the written sources tell us. In addition to this, the results from dendrochronological dating state that the wood from the ship was cut down in 1482-1483 in the northern parts of France.
In upcoming research it would be interesting to know where the ship came from. Did the Danes import the wood from France and then built the ship themselves, or did they import an already made ship from the northern regions of France? Perhaps there are even more possibilities.
Gatans Museum Karlskrona
BTH Innovation har tillsammans med Blekinge Museum och Hi-Story skapat en prototyp - en app - där användaren via sin smartphone kan uppleva Karlskronas stadsmiljö så som den såg ut för 100 år sedan. På en promenad genom stan kan användaren se museets arkivbilder i sin smartphone, i dess rätta miljö.
Sweden, Karlskrona
A short aerial overview of central Islands of a city of Karlskrona, Sweden. To produce this clip I used a drone called Parrot Bebop.
Frederiks kyrkan och stadstorget i Karlskrona.
Клип о центральной части города Карльскруна, Швеция.
#Karlskrona #drone #parrotBebop
Read more at
Blekinge Museum Rockscen Blekinge 69-99
Reklamfilm för utställningen Rockscen Blekinge 69-99.
Marinmuseum Karlskrona
Marinmuseum Karlskrona
Blekinge Museum, Gribshunden seminar 2015: Ingemar Lundgren (Ocean Discovery)
Gribshunden (or Griffen), sunk in 1495, is possibly the best preserved 15th century warship in the world. Probably built in the Netherlands with timber from France, used by the Danish king on travels to England, Norway and Sweden, it is truly an international shipwreck. Since it is carvel built, it can also give important clues to the ship building techniques used by the great explorers, Columbus and Vasco da Gama.
A Gribshunden seminar took place in Ronneby, Sweden in November 2015. The aim of the seminar was to present current stage of investigation of the shipwreck. Blekinge museum and the county administrative board of Blekinge invited researchers, conservators and archaeologists from different parts of Europe to share their research and their view on Gribshunden.
3D documentation - Ingemar Lundgren from Ocean Discovery
Ocean Discovery is a company that works with 3D modeling and photogrammetry as a support for marine archaeology in documentation, visualization and reconstruction. At the same time they develop the means to get these tools to work in a marine setting. For museums this method is useful as it’s a quite inexpensive tool that will contribute both to the museum’s exhibition and their archaeology.
Photogrammetry is making a 3D scanning of the site or the artifact, using a multitude of overlapping photos taken from different angles. The photos are merged together in the software to create a 3D model, which in turn can be used for multiple purposes. There are different types of photogrammetry depending on the objective. Ocean Discovery is at this point trying to adopt the Close range photogrammetry to marine archaeology. When exploring a ship wreck the visibility is very poor. However, photogrammetry enables us to construct an overview of the site in our software. For research purposes, these are not artistically made impressions of the sites but real images. One can also manipulate the devise by different light setting so as to create the right light for indistinct features to appear more clearly, such as inscriptions for example. Results that can be gained at a ship wreck site are traces of environmental decay or traces of looting for example. One can also calculate weight and exact measurements details. The 3D models can be used in display on websites or in mobile aps, or even 3D printed to be shown at museum exhibitions. It can also be used for pedagogical practice as an interactive tool for detailed study of the site, or artifact, where you’re able to rotate the model in order to study it from different angles.
The approach is said to be a non-intrusive marine archaeology. The meaning of this is that the archaeologists are able to perform a full survey of the site without actually salvaging the wreck. This procedure is also more cost effective. Instead of paying for quite expensive marine excavations of a site, 3D scanning might be a good option.
Karlskrona — Southern Sweden
Karlskrona is a beautiful harbor city in the region Blekinge in Southern Sweden. It is located on 30 different islands and islets that are connected by bridges. This gives the city a certain kind of atmosphere. Holiday cottages that NOVASOL are offering in Blekinge and Karlskrona will create the perfect place for you to stay while you enjoy your vacation, go sightseeing and explore Swedish nature. Karlskrona was originally a naval base for King Karl XI in 1679. A year after this Karlskrona was given its state privileges. The first bridges to the mainland were built in 1682 which put the development of Karlskrona as an important city in motion. The city would soon become the third largest in all of Sweden. In Karlskrona there are many churches that are worth paying a visit while visiting. There is, among other things, Sweden’s largest church constructed from wood. The founding rocks of another church,“Fredrikskyrkan”, were put in place in 1720 and it was finished in 1744. The architect was very influenced by other European styles of architecture. This causes the church to look a lot different compared to other Swedish churches. The same architect also built “Trefaldighetskyrkan” between 1697 and 1709. This church’s style has an obvious touch of The Baroque. Its roof is built as a cube like the Pantheon in Rome. There is also a naval museum in Karlskrona on the island “Stumholmen”. This museum is worth a visit for everyone who visits Karlskrona while staying in a NOVASOL holiday home. Here you will find Galleon figures from the 18th century as well as ship models and an underwater passage from which you can see shipwrecks. Enjoy your vacation in Karlskrona from your holiday cottage and experience the true Southern Swedish culture. Karlskrona is also very exciting for children. There are ferries that arrive in Karlskrona and depart to other cities in Sweden as well as Poland. There is an airport 30 kilometers from the city and a rail road that goes all the way to Göteborg and Malmö or Copenhagen. Rent your NOVASOL holiday cottage today. Novasol website:
Visit Blekinge
Blekinge Underbara Vatten!