Snogeholm Castle

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Snogeholm Castle
Snogeholms slott
Sjöbo Municipality
Snogeholm Castle
Snogeholm Castle is located in Skåne
Snogeholm Castle
Snogeholm Castle
Coordinates55°33′38″N 13°42′46″E / 55.5606°N 13.7128°E / 55.5606; 13.7128
TypeCastle
Site information
Open to
the public
Yes
Site history
Built1870s

Snogeholm Castle (Swedish: Snogeholms slott) is a castle in Sjöbo Municipality, Scania, in southern Sweden.

Snogeholm Castle lies on the eastern shore of Snogeholmssjön (Lake Snogeholm). In the middle ages there was a fortress on an island in Snogeholmssjön, Hejreholm. The fortress was attached to the Archbishop in Lund. A connection to the knight Holger Gregersen Krognos [da; no]is mentioned in 1355. At the Reformation, in 1536, the castle was transferred to the Danish crown because it was destroyed by fire, and was therefore not rebuilt. Later, around 1690, the castle was rebuilt on the edge of the lake where it still is. In 1899 and 1902 the German emperor Wilhelm II spent time there, hunting deer. The current castle was built in the 1870s. It has a style reminiscent of French Baroque with a two-story main building, three towers, all three-storied, as well as two detached single-story wings.[1][2]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Snogeholm". Projekt Runeberg Nordisk Familjebok (in Swedish). December 10, 2023.
  2. ^ "Snogeholm slott". Gammalstorp (in Swedish). Retrieved March 28, 2024.