Stockholm: Baroque Architecture
Places and attractions in the Baroque architecture category
Categories
- Street
- Museum
- Bridge
- Church
- Square
- History museum
- Park
- Art museum
- Theater
- Concerts and shows
- Specialty museum
- Forts and castles
- Shopping
- Neighbourhood
- Art Nouveau architecture
- Nature
- Natural attraction
- Lake
- Baroque architecture
- Art gallery
- Palace
- Shopping centre
- Monuments and statues
- Postmodern architecture
- Island
- Area
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Vernacular architecture
- Architecture
- Science museum
- Nightlife
- Jean de la Vallée
- Sacred and religious sites
- Cemetery
- Amusement park
- Gothic architecture
- Playground
- Stela
- Arenas and stadiums
- Theme park
- Garden
- Shopping district
- Skyscraper
- Spiritual
- Restaurant
- Concert hall
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Amusement ride
- Amusement
- Tower
- Library
- Military museum
- Historical place
- Neo-baroque architecture
- Opera
- Music venue
- Modern art museum
- August Strindberg
- View point
- Ship
- Universities and schools
- Beach
- Golf
- Canal
- Football
Stockholm Palace
Stockholm Palace, also known as the Royal Palace, stands as an emblematic edifice in the heart of Stockholm, Sweden, and serves as the official residence of His Majesty the King of Sweden. With its baroque architecture and a history that dates back to the 18th century...
German Church
Historic church with an opulent interior Nestled in the heart of Stockholm's Old Town, Gamla Stan, the German Church, also known as St. Gertrude's Church, stands as a testament to the city's rich cultural tapestry. This historic church, characterized by its striking Baroque architecture and distinctive...
Katarina Church
Katarina Church, standing with quiet dignity in the vibrant district of Södermalm in Stockholm, Sweden, is a historical beacon of architectural beauty and cultural significance. This 17th-century church, originally inaugurated in 1695, has been a spiritual...
House of Nobility
The House of Nobility in Stockholm, Sweden, is a corporation and a building that maintains records and acts as an interest group on behalf of the Swedish nobility.
Villa Lusthusporten
Villa Lusthusporten, also called villa Wicanderska, villa Brinckska, and villa Liljevalchska, is a 19th-century merchant's house on Djurgården road, north of Djurgården, in Stockholm.
Tessin Palace
The Tessin Palace is a baroque town house located in Gamla stan, the old town in central Stockholm. Located next to the Royal Palace, it is facing Slottsbacken, the major approach to the Stockholm Palace, and flanked by two alleys, Finska Kyrkogränd and Bollhusgränd.
Saint James's Church
Saint James's Church is a church in central Stockholm, Sweden, dedicated to apostle Saint James the Greater, patron saint of travellers. It is often mistakenly called St Jacob's. The confusion arises because Swedish, like many other languages, uses the same name for both James and Jacob.
Lillienhoff Palace
The Lillienhoff Palace is a building located on a corner of the large square Medborgarplatsen in southcentral Stockholm, Sweden. The property is owned and managed by municipally owned AB Stadsholmen.
Kungsholm Church
Kungsholm Church or Ulrika Eleonora Church is a church building at Bergsgatan on the island of Kungsholmen in Stockholm, Sweden. Belonging to the Västermalm Parish of the Church of Sweden, the church was inaugurated on 2 December 1688.
Hedvig Eleonora kyrka
Hedvig Eleonora Church is a church in central Stockholm, Sweden. It is located at Östermalm and belongs to the Church of Sweden and is parish church for Hedvig Eleonora Parish in the Diocese of Stockholm.
Maria Magdalena Church
The Church of Saint Mary Magdalene is a church on Södermalm in central Stockholm, Sweden, dedicated to and named for Jesus' companion Mary Magdalene. The church plan has a nave but no aisles. In its eastern end is a three-sided choir and the transept taking up three bays.
Adolf Fredrik Church
Adolf Fredrik Church is a church in central Stockholm, Sweden, named after Adolf Frederick. It was built in 1768–1774, replacing a wooden chapel from 1674, which was dedicated to Saint Olof. It was opened on 27 November 1774.
Finnish Church
The Finnish Church is a church building in Gamla stan in Stockholm, Sweden. Belonging to the Stockholm Finnish Parish of the Church of Sweden, it was opened in 1725 after the Lilla Bollhuset building had been rebuilt into a church.