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View to Swedish Riksdag Building on the Helgeandsholmen island (on the right). The island is a part of Gamla stan (the Old Town). Gamla stan consists primarily of the island Stadsholmen. Stockholm 2002
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Riddarhuset, House of Knights. Since 2003, it has been a private institution, which maintains records and acts as an interest group on behalf of the Swedish nobility, with the main purpose to maintain old traditions and culture. 2002
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Gåsgränd (Swedish: "Goose Alley") alley in Gamla stan begins under this ark. Stockholm 2002
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Sankt Nikolai kyrka, most commonly known as Storkyrkan (The Great Church). The most famous of its treasures is the dramatic wooden statue of Saint George and the Dragon attributed to Bernt Notke (1489). Stockholm 2002
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Storkyrkan. St. George and the dragon. The statue, commissioned to commemorate the Battle of Brunkeberg (1471), also serves as a reliquary, containing relics supposedly of Saint George and two other saints. Stockholm 2002
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Sankt Nikolai kyrka (Church of St. Nicholas), most commonly known as Storkyrkan (The Great Church) and Stockholms domkyrka (Stockholm Cathedral), is the oldest church in Gamla Stan. 2002
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View from Högvaktsterrassen (Main Guard Terrace) in front of the Royal Palace to the Mynttorget square below. Stockholm 2002
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View to the German church from the Slottsbacken street along the Källargränd street. At the gate on the right: an old urinal. Stockholm 2002
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Köpmanbrinken (Swedish: "Merchant's Slope") is a street composed of two slopes, in Gamla stan. Above the fountain: a 1912 replica of the medieval statue of St. George and his princess from the cathedral Storkyrkan. Stockholm 2002