Gyttorp Explained

Official Name:Gyttorp
Pushpin Map:Sweden Örebro#Sweden
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Sweden
Subdivision Type3:Municipality
Subdivision Name3:Nora Municipality
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Örebro County
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Västmanland
Established Title:First mentioned
Established Date:1539
Area Footnotes:[1]
Area Total Km2:2.74
Population As Of:31 December 2010
Population Total:661
Population Density Km2:241
Timezone:CET
Utc Offset:+1
Timezone Dst:CEST
Utc Offset Dst:+2
Coordinates:59.5°N 72°W

Gyttorp is a locality situated in Nora Municipality, Örebro County, Sweden with 661 inhabitants in 2010. Today it is mainly known for its explosive factory and Ralph Erskine's typical town houses. It is situated by lake Vikern.

History

Gyttorp was most probably settled during the Middle Ages as the place name suggests. Most probably the meaning of the name is Gydhi's or Gydha's new settlement.[2]

Manor house

Gyttorp is mentioned as Gyetorp in the oldest taxation list for the area from 1539. The owner of Gyttorp estate and blast furnace at that time was the district senior juryman Karl Nilsson.[3] He was ennobled in 1561 by king Eric XIV of Sweden. His coat of arms showed an oak leaf. This made Gyttorp estate a manor house for some decades.[4]

Military industry

Karl Nilsson died in 1569, but the estate stayed in his family until 1606 when the Swedish state bought it in order to build a small scale military industry at the site. A new blast furnace and foundry were soon built where cannons, cannonballs and grenades were made of iron. This military production was continued until the mid 17th century, but from 1621 by private lease-holders. In 1670 the Swedish state sold Gyttorp to private owners and the water power was now only used for a watermill and saw mill.[5] A furnace for copper production was built here in the 1710s but was closed in the 1750s. Between 1706 and 1804 there was an inn in Gyttorp.

Explosive factory

In 1858 an explosive factory was built next by lake Vikern in Gyttorp. At first gunpowder and later nitroglycerin and dynamite was produced. The explosives were mainly used for blasting in mines. In 1915 this Gyttorps Sprängämnes AB was united with Alfred Nobel's company Nitroglycerin AB and in a few years the new company moved all its production to Gyttorp. This meant that a new modern factory was built in Gyttorp and around it a new urban area grew up. Many private homes were built and after World War II Nitroglycerin AB gave the British architect Ralph Erskine the task to plan the new modern Gyttorp which has given Gyttorp a very typical architecture. 131 apartments as well as business premises and a school were built between 1948 and 1961.[6] In the 1950s the explosive factory employed more than 800 workers.

Today the explosive factory is owned by the Australian company Orica and the production is concentrated to detonation systems such as Nonel that was invented by the engineers in Gyttorp during the 1960s. The once in all aspects dominating factory that around 1980 had 1600 employees today has a workforce of less than a fifth of that figure.

Shotgun shells have been produced in Gyttorp since 1908 under the brand Gyttorp. The production was started by Gyttorps Sprängämnes AB but today it's produced by the company Gyttorp AB.

Riksdag elections

Year%VotesVSMPCLKDMSDNyDLeftRight
1973[7] 91.27375.065.918.04.71.84.371.027.1
1976[8] 91.37104.865.418.05.11.05.670.128.7
1979[9] 89.17034.467.313.56.10.67.371.726.9
1982[10] 90.37015.372.90.410.82.60.17.878.221.3
1985[11] 89.46586.470.41.47.86.27.976.721.9
1988[12] 83.45897.367.12.99.36.31.05.877.221.4
1991[13] 85.85899.058.20.87.84.62.48.87.667.223.6
1994[14] 88.25749.165.22.36.64.51.09.81.476.522.0
1998[15] 78.751219.353.92.74.93.36.38.276.022.7
2002[16] 74.249112.858.21.86.17.76.34.31.872.924.4
2006[17] 79.75165.457.03.16.85.23.311.66.665.526.9
2010[18] 80.65725.451.23.35.24.53.819.16.860.032.7
2014[19] 79.65595.944.72.05.92.32.311.821.352.622.4
2018[20] 84.75797.136.11.67.81.25.99.728.352.545.1

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tätorternas landareal, folkmängd och invånare per km2 2005 och 2010 . 14 December 2011 . . Swedish . https://web.archive.org/web/20120127055525/http://www.scb.se/Statistik/MI/MI0810/2010A01/Tatorternami0810tab1_4.xls . 27 January 2012 . live . 10 January 2012 .
  2. Wahlberg 2003, p.100
  3. Johansson 1881–1882, p.201
  4. Almqvist 1960, p.137
  5. Klingnéus 1989, p.455–457
  6. Andrén 1964
  7. Web site: Allmänna valen 1973. sv. SCB.
  8. Web site: Allmänna valen 1976. sv. SCB.
  9. Web site: Allmänna valen 1979. sv. SCB.
  10. Web site: Allmänna valen 1982. sv. SCB.
  11. Web site: Allmänna valen 1985. sv. SCB.
  12. Web site: Allmänna valen 1988. sv. SCB.
  13. Web site: Allmänna valen 1991. sv. SCB.
  14. Web site: Allmänna valen 1994. sv. SCB.
  15. Web site: Allmänna valen 1998. sv. SCB.
  16. Web site: Gyttorp - summering. sv. Valmyndigheten.
  17. Web site: Allmänna val 17 september 2006 - Gyttorp. sv. Valmyndigheten.
  18. Web site: Gyttorp - Röster Val 2010. sv. Valmyndigheten.
  19. Web site: Gyttorp - Röster Val 2014. sv. Valmyndigheten.
  20. Web site: Gyttorp - Röster Val 2018. sv. Valmyndigheten.