place

Tromøy

1878 establishments in Norway1992 disestablishments in NorwayArendalFormer municipalities of NorwayPopulated places disestablished in 1992
Populated places established in 1878
Arendal Galtesund 02
Arendal Galtesund 02

Tromøy (historic: Tromø) is a former municipality in the old Aust-Agder county in Norway. The 30-square-kilometre (12 sq mi) municipality existed from 1878 until its dissolution in 1992. The municipal area is now part of the municipality of Arendal in Agder county. The administrative centre was the village of Brekka, where the historic Tromøy Church is located. The municipality encompassed all of the island of Tromøya as well as many smaller surrounding islands such as Merdø, Gjesøya, Skilsøy, and Tromlingene.The municipality had two churches: the centuries-old Tromøy Church and the relatively new Færvik Church. Some of the main villages in Tromøy were Færvik, Brekka, Brattekleiv, Sandnes, Revesand, and Pusnes. The municipality was connected to the mainland by the Tromøy Bridge, the only road connection to Tromøya. The other islands of Tromøy were only accessible by boat.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Tromøy (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Tromøy
Tromøy kirkevei, Arendal

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: TromøyContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 58.449722222222 ° E 8.8641666666667 °
placeShow on map

Address

Tromøy kirke

Tromøy kirkevei
4818 Arendal
Norway
mapOpen on Google Maps

Arendal Galtesund 02
Arendal Galtesund 02
Share experience

Nearby Places

Hove Festival
Hove Festival

The Hove Festival (Norwegian: Hovefestivalen) was a music festival held on the island Tromøya outside of Arendal in southern Norway. It was held for the first time from 26 to 30 June 2007. Running for eight years and at one time the largest music festival in Norway, Hove Festival was discontinued after its 2014 show due to negative profits. Hove Festival was acquired by Festival Republic in 2008 after going bankrupt. As with other Festival Republic events, there were no age restrictions, and children under the age of 12 were admitted free of charge.Hove strove to be an environmentally neutral festival, both buying carbon offset quotes for all power and transportation used during and prior to the festival, and sorting and recycling all trash produced by the event. Preparation for the festival relied heavily on volunteer work. In 2010 there were a total of 2,500 people volunteering for security, stage hand, drivers, kitchen duty and post-festival cleanup. Hove consisted of several different areas such as the camp area, festival area and "zero" area. The camp held up to 10,000 campers and was open throughout the festival. The festival area, including the shopping street, was open to everyone who had a day bracelet or festival bracelet. The zero area, which has several fast-food shops, was open to everyone with or without bracelet. The festival had three main performance stages: Hovescenen, Amfiscenen and Teltscenen (tent stage), with Hovescenen being the largest. One of the more prominent acts at Hovescenen was Muse in 2010.