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Riddarfjärden, literally the Knight Fjord, is a bay of lake Mälaren in central Stockholm. Stockholm was founded in 1252 on an island in the stream where lake Mälaren (from the west) drains into the Baltic Sea (to the east). The island is today called Stadsholmen and constitutes Stockholm's Old Town. It is surrounded by land to the north (Norrmalm) and south (Södermalm), and by water to the west (Riddarfjärden) and to the east (Stockholms ström).
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Riddarfjarden.jpg
Riddarfjarden.jpg
The panorama picture above was taken from the heights of Södermalm, west of Stadsholmen, looking down on Riddarfjärden and (left to right):
- Västerbron (bridge),
- island Kungsholmen
- Stockholm City Hall, a red brick building with a bell tower, where the Nobel Prize dinner is served
- tower of Klara Kyrka on Norrmalm, with green copper roof
- the five white sky scrapers north of Sergels Torg
- lots of construction cranes
- high iron tower of Riddarholmskyrkan on island Riddarholmen
- yellow tower of Storkyrkan on Stadsholmen, in front of the flat roof of the Royal Palace in Stockholm
- narrow tower of Tyska Kyrkan on Stadsholmen
- far away radio and TV tower Kaknästornet
See also: Geography of Stockholm