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Missing image Ålesund_kart.png Image:Ålesund kart.png | ||
County | Møre og Romsdal | |
Landscape | Sunnmøre | |
Municipality | NO-1504 | |
Administrative centre | Ålesund | |
Mayor (2003) | Arve Tonning (H) | |
Official language form | Neutral | |
Area - Total - Land - Percentage | Ranked 388 98 km² 93 km² 0.03 % | |
Population - Total (2004) - Percentage - Change (10 years) - Density | Ranked 18 40,001 0.87 % 9.5 % 430/km² | |
Coordinates | Template:Coor dm | |
www.alesund.kommune.no Data from Statistics Norway (http://www.ssb.no/english/municipalities/1504) |
Ålesund is a city and municipality in the county of Møre og Romsdal, Norway. It is a sea port, 236 km north northeast of Bergen, and is noted for its unique concentration of Jugendstil or Art nouveau architecture.
It occupies seven of the outer islands of the west coast, Hessa, Aspøy and Nørvøy,Yksnøy, Ellingsøy, Humla and Tørla which enclose the picturesque town. Ålesund received city rights in 1848, it is the administrative center as well as the principal shipping-place of the Sunnmøre district, and was one of the chief stations of the herring fishery in the 1950s and 1960s. Today Ålesund is the fishing capital of Norway.
Ålesund is adjacent to the Hjørund and Geiranger fjords, frequented by tourists. From Øye at the head of Hjørundfjord a road strikes south to the Nordfjord, and from Maråk on Geirangerfjord another strikes inland to Otta. From Åndalsnes, 120 km east of Ålesund, the railway line Raumabanen goes to Dombås, then southwards on the Dovrebanen railway to Lillehammer and Oslo. Ålesund is a port of call for passenger and freight vessels travelling between Bergen, Kingston upon Hull, Newcastle, Hamburg, and Trondheim, including the daily Hurtigruta (Norwegian Coastal Express ships).
Gangerolf, outside of Norway better known as Rollo, the 10th century founder of the dynasty of the dukes of Normandy, comes from the community of Giske, north west of Ålesund.
Photo_Aalesund_petite.jpg
In the night of January 23, 1904, the city was the scene of the Ålesund Fire, one of the most terrible of the many conflagrations to which Norwegian towns, once built largely of wood, have been subjected. Practically the whole town was destroyed, a gale aiding the flames, and the population had to leave the place in the middle of the night at a few minutes' notice.
Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany had often vacationed in Sunnmøre. After the fire, the Kaiser sent 4 ships with material to aid the people.The town was rebuilt in the Art nouveau architectural style (called Jugendstil in German) with turrets, spires, and ornamentation in many places. The houses were constructed by Norwegian arcitects educated in Trondheim,and being inspired from the style in Europe, i.e Germany, Scotland, France, Belgium and Spain. The style was at its peak in 1900 and today the visitor can still have the unique experience of being surrounded by more than 400 stylish homes and buildings a century old.
Ålesund is the site of an annual Norwegian Food Festival.
The local newspaper is Sunnmørsposten.
The local football team, Aalesunds Fotballklubb (AaFK), founded in 1914, played in the Norwegian premier league in the 2003 season, and will be back in this league in 2005. The team's new arena, Colour Line Stadion, opened 16th April 2005, a beautiful arena only 1 km outside town center. The opening match was against Odd, and took place at 19.00 hours the same date. Ålesund won 2-1. The local supporter club for Aafk is called "Stormen" or "The Storm" and the members are about 2000 local supporters living all over Norway showing off impressive patriotism at all home games, and also, in lesser numbers, at away games.
Institutions of higher learning
- Aalesund University College (Høgskolen i Ålesund)
External link
- Pictures of the buildings of Ålesund (http://www.jugendstil.no/galleri/gall.html). This web site is mostly in Norwegian, but there is some text in German, French, and English.
Municipalities of Møre og Romsdal | Missing image More_og_Romsdal_vapen.png Møre og Romsdal coat of arms |
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Aukra | Aure | Averøy | Eide | Frei | Fræna | Giske | Gjemnes | Halsa | Haram | Hareid | Herøy | Kristiansund | Midsund | Molde | Nesset | Norddal | Rauma | Rindal | Sande | Sandøy | Skodje | Smøla | Stordal | Stranda | Sula | Sunndal | Surnadal | Sykkylven | Tingvoll | Tustna | Ulstein | Vanylven | Vestnes | Volda | Ørskog | Ørsta | Ålesund |
de:Ålesund fr:Ålesund gl:Aalesund nb:Ålesund nn:Ålesund fi:Ålesund sv:Ålesund