, Bergen (BT) and (BA) are the largest newspapers, with
circulations of 87,076 and 30,719 in 2006,
BT is a regional newspaper covering all of Vestland, while
BA focuses on metropolitan Bergen. Other newspapers published in Bergen include the Christian national
Dagen, with a circulation of 8.936, and
TradeWinds, an international shipping newspaper. Local newspapers are
Fanaposten for Fana,
Sydvesten for Laksevåg and Fyllingsdalen and
Bygdanytt for Arna and the neighbouring municipality
Osterøy. The 1,500-seat
Grieg Hall is the city's main cultural venue, and home of the
Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, founded in 1765, and the
Bergen Woodwind Quintet. The city also features
Carte Blanche, the Norwegian national company of contemporary dance. The annual
Bergen International Festival is the main cultural festival, which is supplemented by the
Bergen International Film Festival. Two internationally renowned composers from Bergen are
Edvard Grieg and
Ole Bull. Grieg's home,
Troldhaugen, has been converted to a museum. During the 1990s and early 2000s, Bergen produced a series of successful pop, rock and
black metal artists, collectively known as the
Bergen Wave.
Den Nationale Scene is Bergen's main theatre. Founded in 1850, it had
Henrik Ibsen as one of its first in-house playwrights and art directors. Bergen's
contemporary art scene is centred on
BIT Teatergarasjen,
Bergen Kunsthall, United Sardines Factory (USF), Bergen Center for Electronic Arts (BEK) and
Bergen Assembly, a contemporary art triennial. Bergen was a
European Capital of Culture in 2000.
Buekorps is a unique feature of Bergen culture, consisting of boys aged from 7 to 21 parading with imitation weapons and
snare drums. The city's Hanseatic heritage is documented in the
Hanseatic Museum at Bryggen. in 2025
SK Brann is Bergen's premier
football team; founded in 1908, they have played in the top flight for Norwegian men's football,
Eliteserien, for 67 out of 80 seasons since its establishment in
1937, the second most of any club. The team were the football champions in
1961–1962,
1963, and
2007, and reached the quarter-finals of the
Cup Winners' Cup in
1996–1997. They have also won the
Norwegian Football Cup seven times, most recently in the
2022 season. Brann play their home games at the 16,750-seat
Brann Stadion.
Åsane is the city's second-best team, playing in the
First Division at
Åsane Arena. Now-defunct
Fyllingen played in the top flight in
1990,
1991 and
1993.
Brann and
Åsane also play in the women's top flight,
Toppserien, along with
Arna-Bjørnar. Brann have won the league twice (once as
IL Sandviken), and the
Norwegian Women's Cup once.
Bergen IK is the premier men's ice hockey team, playing at
Bergenshallen in the
First Division.
Tertnes play in the
Women's Premier Handball League, and Fyllingen in the Men's Premier Handball League. In athletics, the city is dominated by
IL Norna-Salhus,
IL Gular and
FIK BFG Fana, formerly also Norrøna IL and
TIF Viking. The
Bergen Storm are an American football team that plays matches at Varden Kunstgress and plays in the second division of the Norwegian league.
Bergensk is the native dialect of Bergen. It was strongly influenced by
Low German-speaking merchants from the mid-14th to mid-18th centuries. During the
Dano-Norwegian period from 1536 to 1814, Bergen was more influenced by
Danish than other areas of Norway. The Danish influence removed the female
grammatical gender in the 16th century, making Bergensk one of very few Norwegian dialects with only two instead of three grammatical genders. The Rs are
uvular trills, as in French, which probably spread to Bergen some time in the 18th century, overtaking the
alveolar trill in the time span of two to three generations. Owing to an improved
literacy rate, Bergensk was influenced by
riksmål and bokmål in the 19th and 20th centuries. This led to large parts of the German-inspired
vocabulary disappearing and pronunciations shifting slightly towards East Norwegian. The
1986 edition of the
Eurovision Song Contest took place in Bergen. Bergen was the host city for the
2017 UCI Road World Championships. The city is also a member of the
UNESCO Creative Cities Network in the category of gastronomy since 2015.
Music performing in
London, 2016 Bergen has been the home of several notable alternative bands, collectively referred to as the
Bergen Wave. These bands include
Röyksopp and
Kings of Convenience on the small, Bergen-based record label Tellé Records, as well as related side-projects, such as
The Whitest Boy Alive,
Kommode, and
Visekongene on independent labels. Other internationally well-received artists also originating from Bergen include
Aurora,
Sondre Lerche,
Kygo,
Boy Pablo and
Alan Walker. Bergen is also known as the "
black metal capital of Norway", due to its role in the
early Norwegian black metal scene and the amount of acts to come from the city in the early 1990s. Also the singer Einar Selvik of the band Wardruna was born in Bergen and became famous thanks to the TV series
Vikings. Bergen is also the birthplace of composer
Edvard Grieg. The biggest music festival in the city is
Bergenfest.
Street art Bergen is considered to be the street art capital of Norway. Famed artist
Banksy visited the city in 2000 and inspired many to start creating street art. Soon after, the city brought up the most famous street artist in Norway:
Dolk. His art can still be seen in several places in the city, and in 2009 the city council choose to preserve
Dolk's work "Spray" with protective glass. In 2011, Bergen council launched a plan of action for street art in Bergen from 2011 to 2015 to ensure that "Bergen will lead the fashion for street art as an expression both in Norway and
Scandinavia". The Madam Felle (1831–1908) monument in Sandviken, is in honour of a Norwegian woman of German origin, who in the mid-19th century managed, against the will of the council, to maintain a counter of beer. A well-known restaurant of the same name is now elsewhere in Bergen. The monument was erected in 1990 by sculptor Kari Rolfsen, supported by an anonymous donor. Madam Felle, civil name Oline Fell, was posthumously remembered in a popular song, possibly originally a folksong, "Kjenner Dokker Madam Felle?" by
Lothar Lindtner and
Rolf Berntzen on an album in 1977. ==Parks and bathing places==