Vadstena ( Swedish pronunciation: [ˈvâsːˌteːna] ) is a locality and the seat of Vadstena Municipality , Östergötland County , Sweden , with 5,613 inhabitants in 2010. From 1974 to 1979 Vadstena was administered as part of Motala Municipality .
5-575: Omberg ( Swedish pronunciation: [ˈɔ̌mːbærj] ) is a forested mountain in the western Östergötland County in Sweden. Administratively it is split between the municipalities of Ödeshög in the south and Vadstena in the north. It lies between Lake Vättern and Lake Tåkern . Alvastra Abbey lies at its foot. Geologically Omberg is a horst , a fault -bounded and uplifted block of bedrock . The western cliff of Omberg has been indicated as an ättestupa in folk history. This article about
10-406: A location in Östergötland County , Sweden is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Vadstena Despite its small population, Vadstena is, for historical reasons, still referred to as a city : though it received its city privileges in 1400), Statistics Sweden only counts as cities Swedish urban localities with more than 10,000 inhabitants. Above all, the city of Vadstena
15-475: Is noted for two important facts of Swedish history. It was in Vadstena, year 1350, that Saint Bridget of Sweden founded the first monastery of her Bridgettine Order , and Vadstena Castle is one of Sweden's best-preserved castles from the era of Gustav Vasa in the 16th century, when Sweden became Protestant. Today the surviving buildings of the monastery are occupied by a hotel, (Vadstena Klosterhotel), and
20-460: Is well preserved and the streets have not changed much over the centuries. The Town Hall is Sweden's oldest, dating back to the early 15th century. Notable is the main street ( Storgatan ) where all the shops are gathered, as they would have been during the Middle Ages. The botanist Erik Acharius died in Vadstena (1819). Vadstena also preserves elements of more recent history in the museum of
25-492: The castle houses the provincial archives and a museum of 16th and 17th century furniture, portraits and paintings. Since the 16th century, Vadstena has been the location of a hospital. Earlier in history, it mainly housed mental patients. Today, some of the oldest buildings present the Vadstena Hospital Museum. The buildings in the city centre date mainly from the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries. The old town
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