|
Home Themes Regions Tourist Boards Services Search Trips |
![]() |
Current
Issue |
| CulturalTravels.net - Home | More Heritage Sites |
Volume 3, July 2001 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
|
![]()
A UNESCO World Heritage Site |
||||||||||||||
|
But as Stockholm, 115 miles (186 kms.) to the north, began asserting itself, becoming one of the major players in the budding Hanseatic League, Visby slipped into a long, slow decline. It fell off the major trade routes and entered a 700-year-long period of neglect and virtual obscurity. The once rich city saw its landmark walls and buildings slowly crumble and decay. Since Visby lacked the money to repair itself, it also lacked the money to undertake demolitions or radical alterations. By the 19th century, the town was a pleasant near-ruin. It was soon discovered by the growing class of affluent urbanites around the Baltic littoral who increasingly could afford travel and were taken with the romance of their own region’s history.
Visby’s citizens were no fools. They restored their town to a condition approximating that of seven centuries before, but resisted the temptation to add too many anachronistic modern touches. Visitors might well enjoy the town’s now modern plumbing and services, but those were made available within the walls and on the streets of a lovingly restored medieval city. By 1995, Visby’s dedication to authenticity won it designation as a World Heritage Site. Visby is a pleasant ferry ride from Nynashamn near Stockholm or Oskarshamn on Sweden’s southeast coast, and makes a wonderful headquarters town for exploring Gotland. The 1,159-square-mile island, mostly flat and rolling, is primarily a place of small farms, narrow lanes, medieval churches and unhurried towns -- perfect for bicycling or leisurely car touring. In August, just before visitors leave the island to hustle back to their mainland cares, Visby puts on “Medieval Week,” an annual event in which the town takes on the look of a Hanseatic League city in the year 1361. The event is marked by plays, music, tournaments, open-air markets and parades, all under the golden glow of Sweden’s benign late-summer sun. This year, Medieval Week will be held August 5-12. — Patrick Totty |
|
To receive a FREE email version of our monthly newsletter just fill in the Key Interest form |