Havrå
Havrå or Havre (sometimes Havretunet or Havråtunet) is a cluster farm along the southern shore of the island of Osterøy in Osterøy municipality, Vestland county, Norway. Havrå is one of the last and best preserved of the common farm clusters on the western coast of Norway. Havrå was the first cultural environment to be protected under section 20 of the Norwegian Cultural Heritage Act.[2] It was not connected to the national road network until late in the 1960s.
Havrå
Havre | |
---|---|
Farm | |
View of the farm area, Havretunet | |
Havrå Location in Vestland county | |
Coordinates: 60°26′22″N 05°34′31″E | |
Country | Norway |
Region | Western Norway |
County | Vestland |
District | Nordhordland |
Municipality | Osterøy |
Elevation | 71 m (233 ft) |
Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) |
Havrå is situated on very steep terrain on the south side of the island of Osterøy, along the Sørfjorden. The farm area is shaped in a typical fashion for the steep terrain along the Western Norwegian fjords. It can be clearly seen from both the railway (the Bergen Line) and the highway that goes between the cities of Bergen and Oslo.
Many of the buildings at Havrå are characteristic to the inner coastal district between Bergen and the Sognefjorden; the combination of dry masonry and juniper cladding on barn façades that are exposed to rain and wind.[2]
Name
The name, with various spellings, dates back as far as 1303. In the oldest sources the name is written Havra (possibly representing Havrá). From the 16th century the name was often spelled (with many variations) Havre.[3]
In 1949-1950, a film called Havretunet was made about life at Havrå. It was released in 1952. Some of the people taking part in the film worked to change the name from Havre to Havrå. This changing of name was accepted by the National Map Service, but the name change remains controversial among the local population.[4][5]
Media gallery
- View looking south towards the mainland
- Havretunet between the houses
- Havretunet between the houses
- A demanding technique, but the cladding lasts for 30–50 years
- The mills are near the houses
- Havretunet from across Sørfjord, near Romslo
- The grain is poured into the tract and the flavour is gathered on the desktop surrounding millstones and is wiped down to a bin in the front of the table
- Weather exposed barn walls clad with juniper. Juniper keeps the lashing rain out, permits draft and keeps the hay dry.
- View of the traditional fencing
- Mill houses
- Main path through the farm area
See also
- Strip farming in Norway
- movie "Two Lives" (2012) - scenes filmed at Havra farm
References
- "Havrå" (in Norwegian). yr.no. Retrieved 2014-04-25.
- [email protected] (2003-03-06). "Havrå Farmstead". Norwegian Cultural Heritage (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2016-12-05.
- "Brief history of Havråtunet" (in Norwegian). Stiftinga Havråtunet. Archived from the original on 2007-01-16.
- "Havre or Havrå?" (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 2011-07-16.
- "Havre is the name" (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 2011-07-24.
External links
- Stiftinga Havråtunet (in Norwegian)
- Introduction to the documentary film about Havretunet (in Norwegian)
- Havretunet at IMDb
- Havråtunet at IMDb Short version of the original documentary film Havretunet
- Kulturnett Vestland
- Stiftinga Havråtunet
- Museumssenteret i Vestland
- Miljøstatus i Norge: Havrå