The
southern Gothenburg archipelago lies off the coast of
Gothenburg, Sweden's second-largest city. It has 5,000 permanent and another 6,000 summer residents. The
archipelago is completely
car free. Transportations is carried out by means of cycles, delivery mopeds, electric cars and ferries. In the
Norse sagas, it was called
Elfarsker (the river islets), as the river
Göta älv had its estuary there. The islands appear to have been famous as a location for
holmgangar during the
Viking Age. Sagas where the location appears: •
Örvar-Odds saga •
Bósa saga ok Herrauðs •
Þorsteins saga Víkingssonar One of the islands,
Brännö, is described as an important location for fairs in the
Laxdæla saga, and it is also considered to be the likely location of
Breca and the
Brondings of the
Anglo-Saxon poems
Widsith and
Beowulf. • Köpstadsö is often called Kössö. It is a small island with narrow footpaths. Not even mopeds are allowed here. The name of the island implies trading. •
Styrsö: during the 1830s the Öberg family established a guesthouse there. This was the start of a bathing resort, which expanded rapidly with the start of steamboats in 1867. •
Donsö is an important fishing and ship-owning community. The harbour is the center of the island. It is surrounded by 20th century fishing facilities. •
Vargö has been a nature reserve since 1986. The varied sea landscape offers a diversity of flora. It is a good place to see
razorbills, woodland birds,
gulls and
eiders. •
Vrångö is the southernmost inhabited island with a small town centre and a hiking route round both the north and south of the island. ==Transport==