Academic literature on the topic 'Freden i Roskilde 1658'

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Journal articles on the topic "Freden i Roskilde 1658"

1

Alm, Ellen. "The Quantitative Scope of Witchcraft Trials in Norwegian Bohuslen 1587–1658." Arv 78 (December 1, 2022): 69–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.61897/arv.v78i.21424.

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Bohuslen belonged to Norway until 18 March 1658, when the county was ceded to the Swedes as a result of the Peace of Roskilde. This area has fallen between two stools when it comes to documenting Norwegian witchcraft trials. Swedish historians have regarded the area as Norwegian and Norwegian historians have considered it as Swedish. Until now, this area has not been investigated with regard to Norwegian witchcraft trials. This article aims to chart the quantitative scope of witchcraft trials in Norwegian Bohuslen through an empirical study of primary sources. The fluctuation and severity of the witchcraft trials will be examined, especially in comparison to witchcraft trials in Jutland and Eastern Norway.
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Dahl, Bjørn Westerbeek. "Opmålingen af Øresundskysten." Fund og Forskning i Det Kongelige Biblioteks Samlinger 62 (June 27, 2024): 63–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/fof.v62.147167.

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By the Treaty of Roskilde in 1658 the former Danish east coast of the Sound passed into the hands of Sweden. This was a serious development in the long-running conflict between the two countries. It meant that the Danish capital, Copenhagen, was at threat from a hastily organised attack from one of the harbours in Scania, especially Landskrona. In 1749 a huge enlargement of this harbour into a naval headquarters had begun. The Danish Admiralty tried to avert the danger by strengthening the fortifications of Copenhagen, but this did not completely eliminate the threat of an invasion of the west coast of the Sound. In 1752 it was decided to build a harbour on the coast for galleys, that is to say, small flat-bottomed warships, propelled by oars and operated by sailors from the fleet. The lack of detailed maps prompted the Danish Admiralty to order a new survey of the coast from Elsinore in the north to Copenhagen in the south. Three naval officers, under the direction of the leader of the navigation school in Copenhagen, Frederik Wegersløff, were ordered to carry out this task with the help of twenty-four sailors. Within a few months in the summer of 1752 the whole 45-km coastline had been charted in a general overall map and seven detailed ones. The coastline was divided into separate stretches, parallel to the coast, each of which was precisely surveyed, and perpendicular from which the depths were sounded by over ten thousand casts of the lead. Objects in each stretch of the coast were in a distance of roughly half a kilometre placed on the maps by eye. The coast had never before been surveyed with such precision, in terms of both the sea and the land. Earlier surveys (for example, by Bagge Vandel in 1647 and Jørgen Dinesen Oxendorff in 1689) had concentrated on ascertaining the depth of the water, but did not include many objects on the land. The scale of the general map, of about 1:30,000, and of the detailed maps, of about 1:7,500, gives us a fine outline of the forms of the landscape and a lot of detail about the villages, buildings and gardens along the coast. When the maps were delivered to the Admiralty in October 1752, they were the basis for the decision, taken on 27 November 1752, to place a Danish harbour for galleys in the bay of Nivå. Before this happened, the maps were copied, so that the National Archives has one set and the Royal Library another.
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Books on the topic "Freden i Roskilde 1658"

1

Museum, Roskilde, ed. Roskilde Freden 1658. Roskilde]: Roskilde Museum, 2008.

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2

Riksarkivet, Sweden. När sundet blev gräns: Till minne av Roskildefreden 1658. Stockholm]: Riksarkivet, 2008.

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3

Lind, Gunner. Roskildefreden 1658--i perspektiv. Edited by Roskilde Museum. Roskilde: Roskilde Museums forlag, 2009.

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