County of Gripsholm

County of Gripsholm
Gripsholms län
County of Gripsholm
County of the Swedish Empire
1634–1683

Flag of Gripsholm

Flag

Capital Gripsholm
History
 - Established 1634
 - Disestablished 1683

The County of Gripsholm, or Gripsholms län, was a county of the Swedish Empire from 1634 to 1683. It was one of three counties in the province of Södermanland, and in 1683 they were merged into the County of Södermanland.

See also



Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Gripsholm County — is an historical county of Sweden and was one of three counties in the province of Södermanland. They were in 1683 merged into nowadays Södermanland County. See also: *Nyköping County *Eskilstunahus County …   Wikipedia

  • County of Eskilstunahus — Eskilstunahus län Eskilstunahus County County of the Swedish Empire …   Wikipedia

  • County of Nyköping — Nyköpings län Nyköping County County of the Swedish Empire …   Wikipedia

  • Södermanland County — Södermanlands län   County of Sweden   …   Wikipedia

  • Nyköping County — is an historical county of Sweden and was one of three counties in the province of Södermanland. They were in 1683 merged into nowadays Södermanland County. See also: *Gripsholm County *Eskilstunahus County …   Wikipedia

  • Eskilstunahus County — is an historical county of Sweden and was one of three counties in the province of Södermanland. In 1683 they were merged into the present Södermanland County. See also: *Gripsholm County *Nyköping County …   Wikipedia

  • Mariefred — in August 2005, view from Gripsholm Castle …   Wikipedia

  • Södermanland — Coat of arms …   Wikipedia

  • Counties of Sweden — Kingdom of Sweden This article is part of the series: Politics and government of Sweden …   Wikipedia

  • Sweden — This article is about the country. For other uses, see Sweden (disambiguation). Kingdom of Sweden Konungariket Sverige …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”