Telegrafgränd

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Telegrafgränd in April 2007 looking towards Österlånggatan.
Telegrafgränd in April 2007 looking towards Österlånggatan.
Portal of Number 5.
Portal of Number 5.
Non-aligned windows on Number 3 and a mirror devise frequently used in the old town.
Non-aligned windows on Number 3 and a mirror devise frequently used in the old town.
Handle of Number 1.
Handle of Number 1.

Telegrafgränd (Swedish: "Telegraph Alley") is an alley in Gamla stan, the old town of Stockholm, Sweden. Stretching from Skeppsbron to Österlånggatan, it is a parallel street to Slottsbacken and Skeppar Karls Gränd.

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[edit] Origin of the name

The alley is named after the telegraph inaugurated in 1869 and located in the block north of the alley. Formerly it was named Saltkompanigränden[1] ("The Salt Company Alley") after the salt manufacturer from Västervik who had a warehouse built on a site they bought in 1647. In 1508, the alley was called Lindhwidz grend, presumably after a skipper known as Lindivd skeppare, in 1512 fined for having brought 100 loads of "mould and muck from the gate to the bridge" (e.g. into town).[2]

In 1875, several companies operating in the neighbourhood urged the name to be changed to the present name, arguing the old name was circumstantial and often confused with other local names (Saltmätaregränden ("The salt Measurer's Alley"), today Gåsgränd, and Saltmätaregatan, in today's Vasastan), and the City Council had no objections. A proposal from Gamla stan's folk society in 1953 to resume the old name proved unsuccessful.[2]

[edit] A walk east to west

The present building on Number 2 (Aeolus 1) was constructed for the national telegraph department (Telegrafverket) in 1868-70 to the design of architect Ludvig Hawerman followed by various devastating reconstructions before the restoration of Ivar Tengbom in 1951-59. During the Middle Ages, this was the location of the northernmost defensive tower in the eastern city wall built during the 14th and 15th centuries. As a result of a reconstruction in the mid 18th century, the lot of the salt company building facing Slottsbacken was united with the one facing Telegrafgränd and in 1782 the building was completely reconstructed again. It was the location for the National Archives (Riksarkivet) and the Royal Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities (Kungliga Vitterhets-, Historie- och Antikvitetsakademien (KVHAA) or Vitterhetsakademien for short) during the period 1848-1863. [3]

In medieval times, the building along the south-eastern part of the alley (Bootes 5 facing Skeppsbron) was separated from the southern part of the block by a narrow alley, the western end of which is still discernible on 3-5, Österlånggatan. The eastern end of the alley was bought by Secretary Israel Isrealsson Lagerfelt (1610-1684) who built the present building on the lot.[4][5]

The building on Number 4-6 (Aeolus 3) was designed by Ingvar Tengbom 1952-1954. On the lot the councillor Erik Fleming had a three-storey building constructed in the 1660s. On its demolition the original decorated wainscots discovered were safeguarded by the Stockholm City Museum.[3]

The basement of Number 1 (Bootes 4) is possibly preserved from the Middle Ages, while the Y-shaped wall anchors between the first and second floors are considerably younger, the third floor is from the first half of the 17th century, and the top floor if from 1652. The building was extensively rebuilt in 1875 and 1902 which gave the façade most of its present appearance.[4]

The building on Number 3 (Bootes 3), rebuilt in the 17th century, was united with the building on the opposite side of the alley during the 18th and 19th centuries. It was rebuilt in 1907, from when it got most of its present appearance, while it conceals remains of medieval walls shared with Number 5. [4]

While both the interior and the exterior of Number 5 (Bootes 2) mostly dates back to a reconstruction in 1764, the extent of the building is a century older, and the walls of first three storeys are preserved from the Middle Ages (the fork-shaped wall anchors and the decorated doors are from the 17th century though).[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Béatrice Glase, Gösta Glase (1988). "Östra Stadsholmen", Gamla stan med Slottet och Riddarholmen, 3rd ed. (in Swedish), Stockholm: Bokförlaget Trevi, 113. ISBN 91 7160 823 0. 
  2. ^ a b (1992) "Innerstaden: Gamla stan", Stockholms gatunamn, 2nd ed., Stockholm: Kommittén för Stockholmsforskning, 76-77. ISBN 91-7031-042-4. 
  3. ^ a b Tord O:son Nordberg (1975). "Aeolus", Gamla stan i Stockholm I - Kvarteren Achilles—Glaucus (in Swedish). Stockholm: Stockholms Kommunalförvaltning, 28-31. 
  4. ^ a b c d Tord O:son Nordberg (1975). "Bootes", Gamla stan i Stockholm I - Kvarteren Achilles—Glaucus (in Swedish). Stockholm: Stockholms Kommunalförvaltning, 99-102. 
  5. ^ ISRAEL ISRAELSSON LAGERFELT - Uppsala universitetsbibliotek, Handskriftsavdelningen UUB (Swedish). Uppsala universitetsbibliotek. Retrieved on 2007-04-05.

[edit] See also

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