Gamla Stan and another island, Riddarholmen, together make up Europe's largest and best preserved mediaeval quarter, home to narrow streets (including the narrowest of all, Marten Trotzig Gränd, a whopping 90 centimetres/35 inches wide). Knock around its little shops and have a bite in its lovely restaurants, such as the classic Fem Små Hus. Catch the changing of the guard at the Royal Palace, one of the largest on the continent. Nearby is the austere yet impressive red-brick city hall, where all the Nobel Prizes but the peace prize are awarded each December.

Top spots not to miss, including more than 70 museums, with standouts such as the Vasamuseet, built around a restored 17th-century ship; the Nobelmuseet, covering the history of the Nobel Prizes and their recipients; the Modern Art Museum, designed by my own country's Rafael Moneo, with a suitably impressive collection of national works with names including Picasso, Dalí, and Matisse; and Skansen, an absoluteley enchanting example - and the world's oldest - of an open-air ethnographic museum, where houses and shops from centuries past are brought together and brought to life with actors to show you how it was back in the day (here they throw in a zoo with Nordic critters). And of course let's not forget the fun, very interactive ABBA Museum!

To all that, of course, these days you have to add the Stockholm of the late Stieg Larsson, who wrote The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo and its sequels, much of it set in the working-class district of Södermalm, including Kvarnen, a pub frequented by the series heroine Lisbeth Salander.The City Museum (also a very worthy visit in and of itself) actually organises tours at this point, so have at it!

Read more in my post Sweet Summertime in Stockholm.

 

Leonardo Patrizi

 

 

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