, sometimes referred to as Sudermannia, is a historical province or landskap on the south eastern coast of Sweden. It borders Östergötland, Närke, Västmanland and Uppland. It is also bounded by lake Mälaren and the Baltic sea.
The Södermanland County is frequently shortened to Sörmland in Sweden and particularly locally.
Södermanland means "Southern mens land". It was used as a direction reference with lake Mälaren, compare with Uppland (north) and Västmanland (west).
The population of Södermanland is 1,104,611 as of 2004. It distributes over four counties as follows:
| County | Population |
|---|---|
| part of Stockholm County | 837,052 |
| Södermanland County | 260,380 |
| part of Västmanland County | 6,743 |
| part of Östergötland County | 436 |
The southern parts of the capital Stockholm lies in Södermanland (the northern half is in Uppland).
The terrain is flat, with its highest altitude being Skogsbyås at 124 meters elevation. The terrain largely consists of water filled hollows covered with woods on the heights.
There are three major water regions. One in the west, where lake Hjälmaren drains into Mälaren. There is a second water region on Södertörn, which is rather small in size and has no larger lakes: Bornsjön 6.5 km², Orlången 2.5km², Magelungen 2.9km². The third is to the south towards Kolmården.
From the Viking Age are 300 rune stones remaining, second only to Uppland in quantity. The oldest is from the late 6th century, the Skåäng stone.
After that, the earliest recorded history is generally of the legendary kind. Before the 7th century it is deemed to have been governed by petty kingdoms. This period ended when Ingjald the Ill-Ruler allegedly had them arsoned around 640.
The oldest city with the historical city status in Sweden was Södertälje, a privilege granted around 1000. After that, Nyköping received the privilege in 1187. In the 13th century, Stockholm was granted the privilege; in the 14th century followed by Strängnäs, Torshälla and Trosa.
Around 1100, Strängnäs became the episcopal seat with a bishop and cathedral. It was for a long time the only diocese of the province. In 1942 the diocese was divided into the Diocese of Stockholm.
The first affirmative recorded history starts in the 13th century. King Magnus Ladulås was given the province in 1266, and settled himself on the manor at Nyköping. Nyköping became one of the most important cities in Sweden at the time. In 1317, Nyköping become the location of the infamous Nyköping Banquet where King Birger had both his brothers murdered to take possession of the crown and avenge earlier wrong-deeds.
Other cities were also of importance. In 1523 the King Gustav Vasa, referred to as the Sweden's father of a nation, was crowned in Strängnäs. The date, June 6, eventually was commemorated as the national holiday. The sons of Gustav Vasa favoured the province, and expanded on the castles into the fancy architecture of the time.
Arms were granted in 1560. The arms is represented with a ducal coronet. Blazon: "Or, a Griffin rampant Sable beaked, langued, membered and armed Gules."
Of buildings, the arguably most impressive is the castle of Gripsholm. Nearby is the Gripsholm Runestone, a typical Viking Runestone, commemorating an earlier viking expedition.
The cemetery Skogskyrkogården in southern Stockholm is a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Provinces of Sweden | Södermanland
Södermanland | Södermanland | Södermanland tartomány | セーデルマンランド県 | Sudermannia | Södermanland | Södermanland | 南曼兰省
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Södermanland".
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