Adels

Adels is an island in the middle of the lake Mlaren in Sweden near southern and northern Bjrkfjrden. The administrative center of the important Viking settlement Birka (on the neighbouring island Bjrk) was situated at Hovgrden on Adels. Birka and Adels form a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Geography

The Adels landscape consists of pine-clad rocky hills and moraine ridges varied with fields and beautiful leaf trees, mostly oaks. The highest spot on Adels is Kunsta mountain with its 53.2 m above the sea level. The top of Kunsta mountain has a beautiful outlook tower which offers a great view of the middle of lake Mlaren.

Demographics

The permanent residents is around 700 people, a number that has been quite stable through out the centuries. Most of the working force today commute to Stockholm but there are also a lot of farmers and a couple of active fishermen. During the summer months, a lot of summer guests comes to the island, making its atmosphere more lively.

Transportation

Transportation to Adels is very good. Buses (line 311 and 312) start out from the bus terminal Brommaplan in the middle of Bromma and goes to the ferry berth Sjngen on Muns. Buss number 312 takes the car ferry and goes around the whole island. The ferry goes every half hour during the days and every hour during the evenings and nights. The night ferries goes more seldom during the summer months.

History

The history of Adels starts with the stone age. Adels was on that time only some smaller islands which was rising from the sea since the end of the ice age. Lake Mlaren with its freshwater did not yet exist so the skerries that was to become Adels lay in a bay of the Baltic Sea. Fishing, bird and seal hunting created the foundation for the life of the people living there. Graves from the older and younger stone ages exist, but most of the gravefields comes from the Iron Age, mostly the Viking Age. There are also two ancient hillforts (fornborgar) on Adels, one of them, situated on Skansberget near Stenby is unusally well preserved. Adels, earlier called Alsn or Alsnu and the great royal mounds (Kungshgarna) at Hovgrden shows the importance of Adles during the Viking Age. The king lived on the King's House (Kungsgrden) next to Hovgrden on Adels and ruled from there over the greatest Viking city of the time, Birka. During the latter part of the 12th century a christian church was build next to Hovgrden and Birger Jarl's sons built Alsnhus, a splendied castle where king Magnus I of Sweden in 1279 called for the Meeting of Alsn. At that meeting the Alsn stadga was estblished, introducing the privilegies of the Swedish nobility. During the middle ages, Alsnhus was used as a summer palace for kings and governors but it fell later into ruin. What is left of the castle and several graves near Hovgrden was dug up during extensive archological investigations conducted between 1916 and 1926. At the same time as the Birka excavations during the 1990s several excavations was conducted on the area of Hovgrden. Birka and Hovgrden became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1993.

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