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Skokloster Castle

Coordinates:59°42′13.68″N17°37′9.88″E/ 59.7038000°N 17.6194111°E/59.7038000; 17.6194111
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Skokloster Castle
Facade facing west, July 2018
Map
Interactive fullscreen map
General information
Architectural styleBaroque
Town or cityHåbo Municipality
CountrySweden
Coordinates59°42′13.68″N17°37′9.88″E/ 59.7038000°N 17.6194111°E/59.7038000; 17.6194111
Construction started1654
Completed1676 (unfinished)

Skokloster Castle(Swedish:Skoklosters slott) is a SwedishBaroquecastle built between 1654 and 1676 byCarl Gustaf Wrangel,located on a peninsula of LakeMälarenbetweenStockholmandUppsala.It became a state museum in the 1970s and displays collections of paintings, furniture, textiles and tableware as well as books and weapons that amount to 20,000 items.[1]

History

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Thecastlewas built in theBaroquestyle between 1654 and 1676 by the wealthy military commandercountCarl Gustaf Wrangelon a peninsula of LakeMälarenbetweenStockholmandUppsala.[1]It was designed mainly by architectCasper Vogell[de],and other architects involved wereJean de la ValléeandNicodemus Tessin the Elder[2][page needed].It is probable, that castle was built based onUjazdów CastleinWarsaw,Poland.

The Castle and its planned surroundings ca 1690–1710.
The Unfinished Hall.

The castle is a monument to the SwedishAge of Greatness,a period in the middle of the 17th century when Sweden expanded to become one of the major powers in Europe. The death of Wrangel in 1676 meant that the castle was never truly completed. TheBrahefamily who inherited the castle after Wrangel's death, had their own family castles and did not complete the interiors. Thus a large banqueting hall remains largely in the same condition as the builders left it in the summer of 1676. It is now called the Unfinished Hall. Skokloster Castle is the only building in Europe with a complete 17th-century building site of equal authenticity. Alongside the Unfinished Hall there are a number of other related items from the same period, as several hundred tools and about a dozen books on construction.[3][page needed]

The castle was converted into a permanent residence after the Second World War, when the von Essen family moved in. An apartment was built on the bottom floor with central heating, a modern bathroom and electricity. The upper floors were to be preserved as a museum. The renovation was carried out in two steps in 1947 and 1952, creating a modern living space inside the castle.[4]

In 1967, the Von Essen family, who inherited the castle from Brahe when the family died out in 1930, sold the castle and its contents to the Swedish government; Skokloster Castle became a state museum and government agency named theRoyal Armoury and Skokloster Castle with theHallwyl MuseumFoundation(LSH).[5]the family still resides in the vicinity.[citation needed] In the 1970s, architect Ove Hidemark renovated the castle by using the same materials and building techniques as in the 17th century, constituting a benchmark in Swedish conservation techniques.[6][page needed][7]

The interiors of the castle are thought to be especially well preserved, considering that it is without modern heating in a cold climate.[8]A thorough renovation of the roof was undertaken with a second stage of the renovation commencing in March 2015, as the roof had leaked resulting in mold and damage especially to the paintings.[citation needed]

Museum collections

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The paintingVertumnusbyArcimboldois part of the castle collection.

The finished parts of the castle display the full, sumptuous splendour of the Baroque. Its detailed chambers are home to collections of paintings, furniture, textiles and silver and glass tableware.[7]One of the most famous paintings is the 16th centuryVertumnusby Italian masterGiuseppe Arcimboldo,depicting the face of Holy Roman emperorRudolf IIas the Roman god of the seasons using fruits and vegetables. The painting was taken as war booty inPraguein the 17th century.[citation needed]

The castle armoury and library are noteworthy, both founded on Wrangel's collections of weapons and books and enriched and enlarged by other 17th- and 18th-century aristocratic bequests, such as those byCarl Gustaf Bielke.[citation needed]The library contains both terrestrial and celestial globes byAnders Åkerman.

The armoury contains the largest collection of personal 17th century military weapons in the world. Mostlymusketsandpistols,but alsoswords- including Japanese samurai swords - small cannons, pikes and crossbows. The weapons collection also includes various exotic items such as a 16th-century Eskimo canoe and snake skins. The original scale model of the castle, which the architect Caspar Vogel had made to demonstrate his plan to Count Wrangel, is also there.[citation needed]A large part of the collection are war spoils looted from Poland during theDelugein 17th century.

Further reading

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  • Bergström, Carin M. (18 December 2018) [2001]. "Skokloster Castle – one of the world's foremost Baroque museums".Museum International.53(2).UNESCO:36–40.doi:10.1111/1468-0033.00310.ISSN1350-0775.S2CID162324492.
  • David H. Stam, ed. (2001). "Skokloster Castle Library".International Dictionary of Library Histories.Fitzroy Dearborn.ISBN1579582443.

References

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  1. ^abBergström 2001,p. 36.
  2. ^Erik Andrén, ed. (1948).Skokloster.Nordisk rotogravyr.
  3. ^Bengt Kylsberg, ed. (1997).Skokloster - Reflections of a Great Era.Skoklosters slott.
  4. ^Legnér, Mattias (December 2023)."Comfort in a castle: adaptation due to long-term residency in a historic monument".The Journal of Architecture:1–26.doi:10.1080/13602365.2023.2276426.ISSN1360-2365.
  5. ^"A government agency. Three museums – one government agency".Skoklosters slott.n.d.Retrieved28 February2017.
  6. ^Ove Hidemark, ed. (1972).Skoklosters slott - en restaurering(in Swedish). Skoklosters slott.
  7. ^abBergström 2001,pp. 36–40.
  8. ^Bergström 2001,p. 39.
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