The fascinating Monks' Island is not to be missed. This little island with a fort is situated in Trondheim harbour and served as Trondheim's execution ground and special prison in ancient times.
Today the island is a popular recreational area, with good bathing and a popular restaurant.
Open from 20 May to 3 September. Boats depart daily every hour from Ravnkloa. Trips can be arranged for groups from the middle of April until the end of September. Please contact
Lilletorget Hotel and Conference Center
In days of yore
The Bay of Naples has its Castel del Nuovo, and Trondheim fjord has its Munkholmen. It often takes the fresh eyes of an outsider to see the picturesque that is around you everyday. Thus it was that Edward Clarke, the Egyptologist, wrote in 1799 that this little island in the north by far outshined its Italian counterpart.
After Trondheim was ravaged by a major and destructive fire in 1681, the city planner from Luxembourg and the Danish army, Major General Johan Caspar de Cicignon, drew up a new city plan, where Munkegata (one of the main streets) was placed at an angle to the rectangular downtown area so that it was perfectly aligned to highlight Munkholmen and Nidaros Cathedral. The sombre grey walls of the buildings on Munkholmen have many secret messages, layer upon layer of history, some of which is echoed in famous literature.
In summer, when winter's hard gusts of wind that cover the tiny island with frothy salty foam have abated, droves of sun-bathers come to the island to swim in the clear waters and bask in the sun by the old fortification walls. Amateur theatrical performances also attract visitors. In days of yore though, the earls ruling the region preferred to use the island as a place of execution. After having been so violently removed from their bodies, the heads of Håkon Earl and his thrall Kark were placed on stakes here to their everlasting shame, only a few years before Olav Tryggvason had rowed into the fjord on his way to founding the city of Trondheim, then called Kaupangen (trading place).
According to Icelandic historical record, Sigurd Ullstreng, the King's vassal and regional governor, founded a cloister here around 1105, 'Nidarholmen', the island by Nidar (then the name of the city), was entered in the Pope's tax registers, and just before 1200 Tjodrek the monk wrote a saga of the Norwegian kings in Latin here. However, the monastery laid in ruins before the Reformation.