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Risør

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Risør kommune
70px
County Aust-Agder
District Sørlandet
Municipality
Administrative centre Risør
Mayor (2005) Lars Lauvhjell (Sp)
Official language form Neutral
Area
 - Total
 - Land
 - Percentage
193 Square kilometre>km²
179 km²
0.06 %
Population
 - Total (as of 2004>2004)
 - Percentage
 - Change (10 years)
 - Density
Ranked 142
6,938
0.15 %
-1.6 %
39/km²
Coordinates
[www.risor.kommune.no]
[Data from Statistics Norway]
Coordinates: Risør is a city and municipality in the county of Aust-Agder, Norway. It belongs to the geographical region of Sørlandet. It is a popular tourist place. The surrounding area includes many small lakes and hills. It is known for its beautiful coastline as well. Risør has in the last decade got a growing reputation as the regional capital of arts and crafts, which culminates in the "Villvin-festival" during the summer holiday.

Geography

Risør is the easternmost coastal municipality in Aust-Agder, located on the point where the Søndeledfjord and Sandnesfjord meet, providing ready access to the Skagerrak. (No connection with Sandnes in Rogaland.) It is bordered in the southwest by Tvedestrand, on the northwest by Vegårshei and Gjerstad in Aust-Agder and in the northeast by Kragerø in Telemark.

History

Risør was a small fishing village when Dutch vessels began to call there to purchase timber in about 1570. By 1607 two inns had been opened to serve Dutch sailors.

In 1630 Risør became a privileged port (ladestad).

The place is known for a church building from the Middle Ages, as well as a timber church Den Hellige Ånds (Holy Ghost) which was built in the Baroque style in 1647.

In 1723 Risør became a privileged town. By the end of the 18th century 96 sailing vessels were owned by Risør merchants. It was the 6th largest shipping town and one of four shipbuilding centers in Norway.

In Letters on Sweden, Norway, and Denmark, Mary Wollstonecraft wrote extensively while visiting Risør in 1783, including the following remarks:

Risør played a role in the Napoleonic Wars in 1807-14, when Denmark-Norway took France's side, and therefore became the enemy of Norway's most important trading-partner: Great Britain. (It is from this period that Henrik Ibsen took his subject, when he created his famous poem Terje Vigen.) It was south of Risør, in Lyngør (in neighboring Tvedestrand municipality) that several British men-of-war of the English navy pursued and sunk the last major vessel and the pride of Norway: the line-of-battle ship HDMS Najaden.

Risør was almost wiped off the map in 1861. A great fire swept across the small town leaving just 85 houses and the 1647 church. The city was rebuilt - and today it presents a positive impression of a well kept town with white wooden houses.

By the second half of the 19th century over 100 sailing vessels were home ported in Risør and more than 1000 sailors called Risør home. But the transition to steamships and the economic damage of World War I destroyed Risør’s shipping industry.

Risør was a city built as a result of shipping and industrial interests. Today both the industry and the sailing vessels are gone - leaving behind a picturesque town with a lot of summer tourist attractions.

Economic basis

The historic timber and fishing opportunities have mostly vanished. Paper production served as an economic basis for a period, until the pulp factory was closed in 1970. Currently tourism, a burgeoning art colony and summer vacationers account for a major part of the economy.

Population

The normal population is ~7,000 people, but the population swells dramatically during the summer months.

Community life

Key attractions

Famous residents

References

External links



Municipalities of Aust-Agder

Arendal | Birkenes | Bygland | Bykle | Evje og Hornnes | Froland | Gjerstad | Grimstad | Iveland | Lillesand | Risør | Tvedestrand | Valle | Vegårshei | Åmli


 


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