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Lund

  (lŭnd) pronunciation

A city of southern Sweden north of Malmö. It was the largest town in Sweden during the Middle Ages and today is an educational center. Population: 103,000.

 

 
 
(lŭnd) , city (1990 pop. 62,910), Malmöhus co., S Sweden. It is a commercial and industrial center and a rail junction. Manufactures include paper, packaging, printed materials, and clothing. Mentioned (c.920) in the sagas as Lunda, it became the Roman Catholic archiepiscopal see for Scandinavia in 1103–4 and subsequently flourished as an ecclesiastical and trade center. The city declined after it became (1536) a Lutheran bishopric, and it was devastated during the Danish-Swedish wars of the 17th cent. It passed definitively to Sweden in 1658 with Skåne prov. In 1668 Charles XI dedicated the Univ. of Lund, where the poet Esaias Tegner (1782–1846) later taught. The theological faculty of the university was well known in the 19th cent. The city is also the site of a technical university. Lund has a fine 11th-century Romanesque cathedral and a museum of folk customs.


 
Dialing Code: The telephone dialing code for: Lund, Sweden

The country code is: 46
The city code is: 46


 
WordNet: Lund
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: a city in southeastern Sweden


 
Wikipedia: Lund

Lund
Lund Cathedral in Lund
Lund Cathedral in Lund
Coat of arms of
Coat of arms
Location of Lund in northern Europe
Location of Lund in northern Europe
Coordinates: 55°42′N 13°12′E / 55.7, 13.2
Country Flag of Sweden Sweden
Municipality Lund Municipality
County Skåne County
Province Scania
Charter
Time zone CET ([[UTC+1]])
 - Summer (DST) CEST ([[UTC+2]])
Website: www.lund.se


Sound Lund? IPA: [lɵnd] is a city in Skåne, southern Sweden. The town has 76,188 (As of 2005)[1] inhabitants and is the seat of Lund Municipality, Skåne County. The city is believed to have been founded around 990, when the Scanian lands belonged to Denmark. It soon became the Christian center of Northern Europe with an archbishop and with the towering Lund Cathedral, built in 1103. In 1134 Lund became the capital of Denmark, a title taken by Copenhagen in 1416.

Lund University, established 1666, is today one of Scandinavia's largest institutions for education and research.[2]

History

Lund's origins are unclear. Until recently, the town was thought to have been founded by King Canute the Great of Denmark around 1020. However, recent archaeological discoveries suggest that the first settlement was founded around 990, at the present site of the village of Uppåkra. It was later was moved to its present location, by King Sweyn I Forkbeard. The distance moved was only some five kilometres, but the new location of Lund, on a hill and on the other side of a ford, gave the new site considerable defensive advantages in comparison with Uppåkra, which is situated on the highest point of a rather large plain.

 A street in the old part of the town
Enlarge
A street in the old part of the town

The city was made a see in 1060, and in 1103 became the seat of the archbishop for Scandinavia. The diocese of nearby Dalby was absorbed in 1066. Lund Cathedral was similarly founded in or shortly after 1103. In 1152, the Norwegian archdiocese of Nidaros was founded as a separate province of the church, independent of Lund. In 1164 Sweden also acquired an archbishop of its own, although he was nominally subordinate to the archbishop of Lund.

Lund Cathedral School (Katedralskolan) was founded in 1085 by the Danish king Canute the Saint. This is the oldest school in Scandinavia and one of the oldest in Northern Europe. Many well-known people have attended it, among them actor Max von Sydow and several high-ranking politicians.

In 1658, the Scanian lands were ceded by Denmark to Sweden by the Treaty of Roskilde. On December 4 1676 Lund was defended in the Battle of Lund, one of the bloodiest battles fought in Scandinavia.

Lund University, established in 1666, is Sweden's largest with 41,000 full or part-time students, though not all actually live in Lund. The figure includes Lund Institute of Technology, which is to some extent independent of the old University). As late as the 1940s, Lund was a relatively small city with few large-scale industries, covering only about a fourth of the current urban area and was dominated by the Cathedral and the University. Since then, the student population has increased about twelvefold, many industrial companies in the chemical, medical or electronics branches and, more recently, within information management, have set up establishments in the city, and the town's population, architecture and pulse has been transformed.

Compared with many other Swedish cities, the urban heart of Lund is well preserved. A local law requires any downtown property that is due to be demolished and rebuilt to be archaeologically excavated.

Lund_skyline_februari_2005.jpg


Geography

Lund is located in Sweden's largest agricultural district, in the southwest of Scania, less than ten kilometres from the sandy shore of the Öresund Straits and about 16 kilometres as big as altafs. From the top of the hill Sankt Hans Backar it is possible to see Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark. It is therefore some distance from other Swedish cities, about 250 kilometers to Gothenburg, 600 to Stockholm and about 1200 to Umeå.

The city of Malmö, on the other hand, is only about 20 kilometers away.

Architecture

During the 12th and 13th centuries, when the town was the seat of the archbishop, many churches and monasteries were built. At its peak, Lund had 27 churches, but most of them were demolished as result of the Reformation in 1536. Several medieval buildings remaining, including Lund Cathedral, Liberiet, the restaurant Stäket and parts of the Cathedral School. Timber framing is characteristic of the houses built up to the end of the 19th century, for example the Wickmanska gården.

Most of the central buildings in Lund date from the late 19th century, when small houses were replaced by multi-storey ones. Notable buildings built during this period include the University Library (1902), Grand Hotel (1899) and the University Main Building (1882).

Transportation

Major Roads

Lund has been connected to the motorway network since 1953 when the E22, the first motorway in Sweden, was built round the edge of the town. There are also other connections to most major roads in the area, for example the E6 via Riksväg 16, and the Länsväg 108 which connects to the E65.

Lund train station
Enlarge
Lund train station

Railways and Public Transport

Lund has been on the main railway line between Malmö and Stockholm since 1857. Today there are direct connections to Copenhagen and Helsingør via the Öresund Bridge. This connection is mainly served by the Öresundstågen, maintained by DSB, the Danske Statsbaner in Denmark and Skånetrafiken in Scania, as well as by SJ in the rest of Sweden. Local trafic is managed by the two-coach electric multiple units Pågatåg, which provide connections to many destinations in Scania. Because of Lund's central position, it is possible to travel to the three largest cities in Sweden without having to change trains.

Public transport within Lund is all operated by Skånetrafiken[citation needed] and consists of buses which connect around 400 bus stops together with 11 bus lines served by a fleet of 40 Mercedes Citaro[citation needed] running on compressed natural gas and a few smaller buses using diesel.

Airports

Lund is located very close to Malmö-Sturup Airport which is mainly used for domestic flights. Kastrup the airport for Copenhagen is often used for longer international flights, and is about 45 minutes from Lund. There is also a very small airstrip, Hasslanda Flygfält, to the south of Lund, mainly used for private and charter flights.

Culture

Student choir at the Lund University main building
Enlarge
Student choir at the Lund University main building

The culture in Lund is characterized by the large student population and the student traditions. A lot of the nightlife is located to student nations. The city is currently applying for getting European Capital of Culture in 2014.

Lund also has a city theatre and a few other places for concerts and theatres.

Literature and art

Classical writers who have lived in Lund at some time include August Strindberg, Esaias Tegnér, Ola Hansson, Axel Lundegård, Anders Östling, Bengt Lindforss, and Vilhelm Ekelund.

Lundakarnevalen (The Lund carnival)

The Lund carnival is held every fourth year since 1849, arranged by the students at Lund university. Some students dress up in costumes, often relating to and poking fun at current issues, and parade in wagons. Others perform humorous skits in the evenings.

Sports

Lund is not a notable center for sports except for handball, where it has two teams in the top league: H43 and LUGI. It has also a chess team, Lunds ASK, that for decades has been among the top teams in Sweden.

Industry

Lund is a center of high tech companies such as Sony Ericsson and Ericsson Mobile Platforms, and other telecommunication companies. The Lund Institute of Technology has historical connections with the industrial life. There is even a business park within Lund, Ideon, for high tech companies that have ties to the university.

Other important industries include medical technology (Gambro), pharmaceuticals (Astra Zeneca), biotechnology (Active Biotech, among others), (Alfa Laval) and publishing and library services. The hospital and the university in Lund are two other big employers, with extensive research facilities.

Lund is also home to the Tetra Pak company that manufactures and markets paper packaging and equipment for milk, orange juice etc. all over the world.

Twin cities

Lund has a twin city in each of the Nordic countries, as well as in other countries.[1]

Education

Notable natives

Notes

  1. ^ Lund Municipality homepage, twin cities

See also

  • Lund Principle, an important principle in ecumenical relations between Christian churches.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Murkrona.svg Lund is one of 134 towns with the historical City status in Sweden.


Coordinates: 55°42′N, 13°12′E

bpy:লুন্ড


 
Shopping: Lund
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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Lund" Read more

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