Riksby Explained

Riksby is a suburb within the district of Västerort in Stockholm, Sweden. It is located in the borough of Bromma.[1]

History

The name "Riksby" is derived from Riksby gård, a farm once located in the parish of Bromma parish.The village of Riksby was mentioned for the first time in a parish letter from 1409, when it was known as Rodhersby.[2]

Stockholm Municipality bought the land in the year 1904. It was previously a part of the estate of Åkeshofs Castle (Åkeshof Slott).[3] In 1930, Riksby became an allotment. Because of this the house owners moved from the old Fredhällskolonin on Kungsholmen to Riksby. The district  was established in 1926. In 1939 it was decided that the area was to be an apartment area and the following year the colonizers were to move to  Iris Glia and  Kortenslund. During the interwar period several colony areas in Bromma were added. Riksby allotment was added in 1930. Iris Glia and Iris Riksby  were established in the year 1939. Kortenslund  was founded 1939-1940.[4]

The area for Riksby allotment area is planned through zoning. Riksby allotment area is one of the few allotments in Stockholm that are set in a city plan with official city blocks and roads and is one of the four allotments that is located like a string around the southern and south-western side of Bromma Airport. According to Stockholm city planning office they are included in areas where attention needs to be devoted to culture historical values.

Demography

In 2017 the neighborhood had about 4200 residents, where 26,2% were of foreign background.

Runestones

Riksby has several tourist attractions, such as the runestones at Drottningholmsvägen[5] and at the old  boatman's wharf (Norrby båtsmanstorp).

The Runestone that has two rune carvings estimated to have been created around the year 1070.

Gallery

See also

Related reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Riksby. En stadsdel i Bromma stadsdelsområde . vaxer.stockholm. February 1, 2020.
  2. Web site: Historia. www.brickbandet.se. Swedish. 2018-12-14.
  3. Web site: Åkeshof Slott. akeshofsslott.se . February 1, 2020.
  4. Web site: Linnéas historia. Linneakoloni.se. sv-SE. 2018-12-14.
  5. Web site: Runinskrifter.net – U 58. www.runinskrifter.net. Swedish. 2018-12-14.