Gamla UppsalaPersonal travel impressions in stories and pictures from Gamla Uppsala, Sweden. Click on the pictures to enlarge, send as a free e-card, or download for personal use. You can locate Gamla Uppsala and navigate the world using Google Earth Show on map
N 59° 53.928
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Gamla Uppsala, Swedish for Old Uppsala, is the place where a settlement was built in the 5th century CE. It nowadays consists of several mounds, or burial hills, and a cathedral which was built on the spot of a former pagan temple. This was also the site where ancient rites were performed. These rites were bloody events which took place every 9 years and lasted 9 days; they included sacrificing both humans and animals.
The cathedral nowadays is the most remarkable sight of Gamla Uppsala. King Eric was decapitated here in the 12th century, after which he became a hero. It was only when the former cathedral burned down in the 13th century, that Uppsala was transferred to its present location - the name included. This was only possible after the pope gave his blessing for the change. King Eric's remains were taken to the cathedral in modern-day Uppsala.
For centuries, people carried his shrine in procession from Gamla Uppsala to Uppsala, this path turned to become Eric's path and can still be walked all the way to Uppsala. I only walked the first part, which took me along the mounds. At the place where burial sites are supposed to be (I unfortunately never found them), I turned right and took smaller paths to return to the cathedral. In this lovely religious place, built with thick walls, the sunlight plays on the walls inside. The peaceful atmosphere is only disturbed by fighter jets approaching the nearby military airport.
