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Vaxholm Church

Buildings and structures by Swedish architectsChurches completed in 1803Churches in the Diocese of Stockholm (Church of Sweden)Vaxholm Municipality
Vaxholms kyrka från gatan
Vaxholms kyrka från gatan

Vaxholm Church (Swedish: Vaxholms kyrka) is a church in central Vaxholm, Sweden. The chapel is a single-nave building built in the Neoclassical style. It was completed in 1803 according to drawings by Carl Fredrik Adelcrantz and Olof Tempelman. It replaced an earlier wooden church in Vaxholm.

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

Vaxholm Church
Kungsgatan, Vaxholms kommun

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Wikipedia: Vaxholm ChurchContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 59.403333333333 ° E 18.3475 °
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Address

Vaxholms kyrka

Kungsgatan
185 32 Vaxholms kommun
Sweden
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linkWikiData (Q10713492)
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Vaxholms kyrka från gatan
Vaxholms kyrka från gatan
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Nearby Places

Kodjupet
Kodjupet

Kodjupet is a strait in Sweden's Stockholm Archipelago. Along with the Oxdjupet strait, it is one of two shipping routes connecting the open sea to the city of Stockholm, passing either side of the island of Rindö. Today the Kodjupet is suitable only for smaller vessels, due to its narrow and twisting nature together with a minimum water depth of 3.3 metres (11 ft), but it was formerly the principal route for commercial and naval ships. It passes close offshore of the town of Vaxholm. Although winding in nature, the strait runs broadly from north to south on its route from the sea to the city. It is flanked by the islands of Resarö, Edholma and Vaxön to the west, and Stegesund-Hästholmen, Skarpö and Rindö to the east. The very narrow Stegesundet strait provides a short-cut to the northern part of the Kodjupet strait, passing between the islands of Stegesund-Hästholmen and Skarpö. In 1548, Gustav Vasa constructed the Vaxholm Fortress on an islet in the middle of the southern part of the Kodjupet strait between Vaxön and Rindö. The Oxdjupet strait was, at the same time, artificially reduced in depth in order to prevent its use. Thus, the fortress was strategically situated to defend the city of Stockholm against shipborne attacks from the sea. The fortress has resisted several attacks, has been rebuilt on a number of occasions, and still stands. By the latter half of the 19th century, the Kodjupet strait was proving problematic for the period's larger ships, and in 1879 the main shipping route into Stockholm was diverted to use the Oxdjupet strait, which was dredged to remove its previous artificial obstructions. The strait is crossed by the Vaxholmsleden car ferry, which connects Vaxholm to Rindö, and by the Kastellet ferry, an electrically powered cable ferry that provides passenger access to Vaxholm Fortress.