
The Karlbergskanalen in winter
Kungsholmen is an island in
Lake
Mälaren
in Sweden
, part of
Stockholm
City
. It is situated north of Riddarfjärden
and considered part of the historical province
Uppland
.
Its area is 3.9 km² with a perimeter of 8.9 km. The
highest point is at Stadshagsplan (47 m). The total population is
56,754 (December 31, 2007).
Administratively, it is subdivided into the
five districts Kungsholmen,
Marieberg
, Fredhäll, Kristineberg and Stadshagen
.
Prominent buildings and structures
Bridges leading to Kungsholmen
History
Establishment
Franciscan monks began living on the
island in the 15th century. Because of this, the island was named
Munklägret (the Monks' encampment). The monks subsisted on
cattle-breeding and fishing. They also managed the
brickyard Själakoret at
Rålambshov.
As a result of the Swedish Reformation, which was concluded
at the parliament in Västerås
1527, the monks were expelled and the area became
property of the crown.
At the end of the 16th century,
Johan
III (son of
Gustav Vasa)
established an additional brickyard on the northern bank of the
island. In 1635 the first bridge to Munklägret was built.
A few years later
Queen Kristina
donated large areas of land in the western part of the island to
some of the generals from the
Thirty Years War.
They built magnificent
entails and laid out great gardens.
1644 the crown donated the eastern
part of Munklägret to the authorities of the city of Stockholm,
which then also gets its first city plan. Three years later the remainder of the
island was donated.
In order to facilitate migration to Munklägret privileges were
given to artisans and manufacturers. For example, they were allowed
to set up operations there without having to belong to the
guilds and they were
exempted from tax for ten years. In 1672
Munklägret became a separate
parish
(Kungsholmen) and the whole island was renamed Kungsholmen.
Industrialization
When the
Swedish Empire collapsed in
the beginning of the 18th century the crown embarked on a generous
economic policy to develop Kungsholmen. The entails were turned
into
factories and
hospitals. In Hornsberg a cotton manufacture was
established, at Marieberg a
porcelain
factory.
In the early 19th century the military began to settle in
Kungsholmen, which at the time was still a sparsely populated
idyll.
When
Samuel Owen settled in Kungsholmen,
it had begun developing into a marked district factories and
workers.
This development was accentuated when the
Bolinder brothers start building up their business at Klara Sjö,
west of the Kungsbron
, (King's Bridge) in the mid-1800s. The
company
AB Separator was established at
the end of the 19th century . AB Separator would soon become a
worldwide group of companies and at the beginning of the 20'th
century had more than 2,000 employees.
The industrial breakthrough led to a huge
population explosion. The population
grew from just over 4,000 people in 1860 to 26,000 in 1890. During
the 1880s several apartment blocks were built to remedy the housing
shortage.
Claës Lundin wrote about
these houses: "With one or two exceptions, they give no honor to
the decade." Kungsholmen was commonly referred to as "Svältholmen."
("The island of famine")
Modern Kungsholmen
In the early 1900s a radical structural change took place on
Kungsholmen. The traits from the old industrial district are swept
away and instead housing and public institutions were erected. St.
Görans’ church was built in 1910. At the division of the
Kungsholmen parish in 1925, the new parish was named after the
church.
The residential areas in Fredhäll and in Kristineberg were built in
the 1930s after a functionalist city plan. The bridges Västerbron
and Tranebergsbron were also built the same decade, and Sankt
Eriksbron received its current dimensions.
The Stockholm metro was drawn through
Kungsholmen in the 1950s, first out to Vällingby
and later also to Järvafältet. At this time the
military moved out and the large hospital Serafen is supplanted (on
another location) by the more modern Saint Göran
Hospital
.
References
See also