Saltholm

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Saltholm
Öresundsbron 2011z.jpg
Saltholm in 2011
File:Saltholm-oresund.png
Location of Saltholm in the Øresund
Geography
Location Øresund, Baltic Sea
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Length 7 km (4.3 mi)
Width 3 km (1.9 mi)
Highest elevation 5 m (16 ft)
Highest point unnamed
Country
Denmark
Region Hovedstaden
Municipality Tårnby
Largest settlement Holmegård (pop. 5)
Demographics
Population 5 (as of 2008)
Density 0.3 /km2 (0.8 /sq mi)
Ethnic groups Danish

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Saltholm (Salt Islet) is a Danish island in the Øresund, the strait that separates Denmark and Sweden. It is located to the east of the Danish island of Amager in Tårnby municipality and lies just to the west of the sea border between Denmark and Sweden. It is 7 km long and 3 km wide, covering an area of 16 km², making it Denmark's 21st largest island. Saltholm is very flat; its highest point stands only 2 m (6 ft) above sea level, rendering it vulnerable to flooding if persistent east winds cause a tidal surge in the Baltic Sea.[1] It is a relatively new landmass in geological terms, having risen from the sea about 4,000 years ago, and is surrounded by a large area of shallow water (of 2 m depth or less) that covers an area of 28 km². A series of islets, inlets and rock deposits from the last ice age appear at the south end of the island.[2]

Its neighboring island to the south is the artificial island Peberholm (Pepper Islet), which is a part of the Øresund Bridge and was named to complement Saltholm.

Flora and fauna

Saltholm's vegetation is dominated primarily by grasses, with its landscape consisting mainly of flat chalk meadowlands and coastal meadow. There are few trees on Saltholm, clustered mainly in two places in the north and south-west of the island.[3] The island has a rich variety of flora, notably motherwort (Leonurus cardiaca), henbane (Hyoscyamus niger), blue iris (Iris spuria) and chickweed.[4]

Saltholm is a protected nature reserve for wild birds which nest in large numbers on the island. The southern part of the island, an extensive salt marsh, is protected under the Ramsar Convention[5] and the island as a whole, along with the surrounding area of sea, has been designated a nature reserve by the European Union. Mussel beds, eel grass, snails, crustaceans and fish in the shallow waters around the island provide an important food source for water birds. Because of its importance as a wildlife sanctuary, access to Saltholm and its surrounding waters is strictly controlled. Access to the island is via a small harbour at Barakkebro, at the north end of Saltholm.[2]

The island is Denmark's largest grazing area for geese, some 7,000 of which visit during the summer. Around 3,500 juvenile swans also live on the island in the summer, with some 2,000 wintering there. 10,000–12,000 ducks breed and graze on Saltholm during autumn and late winter/spring. Saltholm is also home to Europe's largest breeding colony of eiders; 15,000 live on the island during the spring and some 7,000–8,000 are hatched on the island each year.[6]

History

File:Saltholm og oresundsbroen.jpg
Saltholm seen from the air, with the Øresund Bridge in the background
The British submarine HMS E13 aground on the shore of Saltholm in August 1915, shortly before being destroyed by German naval forces

Humans have lived in small numbers on Saltholm since the Middle Ages and probably before. The population has ranged from a peak of 298 people in 1916, when the island was fortified during World War I, to only five people as of January 2008.[7] The current inhabitants manage the farm Holmegård on a nature reserve in the northwest of the island to maintain the grass for nesting birds.

The existence of the island is first attested in 1230, when King Valdemar II of Denmark is recorded as having given Saltholm to Bishop Niels Stigsen of the see of Roskilde.[8] For centuries, the island was used to quarry limestone, which was used in nearby Copenhagen and elsewhere; in 1289, the town lord of Copenhagen is recorded to have granted quarrying rights on Saltholm[9] and quarrying continued until as late as 1935.[4] The island was also traditionally used as pasture land for the cattle of the people of the nearby Danish island of Amager.[10] The cows of Saltholm were commemorated in the late 19th century by the Danish painter Theodor Philipsen, who travelled frequently to the island to paint its cattle and treeless landscapes.[11]

Saltholm was used as a quarantine station between 1709 and 1711 when Copenhagen suffered plague and cholera outbreaks. Travellers wishing to land in the city were required to stay in quarantine on the island for 40 days.[12] In 1873, a private company, the Saltholmlaug, acquired the island from the state and still owns it today.[3]

The island's position in the middle of the Øresund gave it some military significance during the two World Wars. In 1912, the Danish government constructed the "Flak Fort" (Flakfortet) on the Salthom Flak sands just north of the island proper, stationing a number of artillery pieces ranging in calibre from 47 mm to 290 mm. Most of the guns were mounted on barbette carriages and protected by armoured shields and concrete and earthen ramparts. The fort was still active at the start of World War II; although old, its guns were still seen as a strong deterrent.[13]

Saltholm was the site of an incident resulting in the loss of the British submarine HMS E13, which ran aground on the island on 17 August 1915 due to a faulty compass. Two days later, two German destroyers attacked the submarine while it was still stranded on the shoreline as the crew worked to refloat the vessel. Fifteen of the submariners were killed before Danish torpedo boats intervened to deter the attackers. The violation of the country's neutrality outraged the Danish government, prompting a diplomatic protest to the Germans, and the casualties were given high-profile official funerals by the Danish navy.[14] The surviving crew were interned in Denmark until the end of the war in November 1918, and the wrecked submarine was scrapped.[15][16] The commander of the E13, Lt Cdr Geoffrey Layton, went on to have a distinguished career in the Royal Navy and commanded the British Eastern Fleet during the Second World War.[17]

The island was for many years considered as a possible location for a new international airport and fixed link between Denmark and Sweden. The nearby Copenhagen Airport at Kastrup has long been the busiest airport in Scandinavia but has suffered from an acute shortage of space and its proximity to built-up areas. In 1965, the Nordic Council agreed in principle to build a new international airport on Saltholm, to replace the airport at Kastrup, and to construct a bridge-and-tunnel link across the island to connect Copenhagen and Malmö.[18] The proposal was strongly supported by Scandinavian Airlines System, the main user of Copenhagen Airport. The plan envisaged building two pairs of runways, which would be carrying up to 20 million passengers a year by 1990. A 9 km (5.6 mi) bridge would connect it to Malmö and a 5 km (3.1 mi) tunnel would link to Kastrup on the Danish side. The project was costed at the equivalent of £250 million in 1967 (£3.1 billion / € 3.4 billion at 2009 prices).[19]

The plan was approved by the Danish parliament in 1969 with completion scheduled for 1985.[20] However, it was repeatedly delayed; contributory factors included the 1973 oil crisis and its economic fallout, a slump in air travel, and opposition from campaigners concerned about the impact on the fragile environment in the Øresund and around the island. The plan was abandoned in 1979 and further investment was made in Copenhagen Airport instead.[21] When the Oresund fixed link was eventually built in the 1990s, it was routed 1 km south of Saltholm to avoid damaging the island and the surrounding shallow waters.

In the internationally acclaimed Danish-Swedish detective series The Bridge, Saltholm provided the climactic location in the final episode of the third season, first broadcast in 2015.

See also

Further reading

  • Niels Houkjær: Saltholm in De danske øer - En lystrejse til Danmarks småøer, S. 151 ff., Nordisk Forlag A/S, Kopenhagen 2006, ISBN 87-02-04176-6

References

  1. Aage Aagesen, Niels Nielsen, Kongelige Danske geografiske selskab, Atlas over Danmark, p. 117. H. Hagerup, 1992
  2. 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  4. 4.0 4.1 "Saltholm". Aschehoug's Leksikon. Aschehoug (Egmont), 2008
  5. D. Eisma, Dredging in Coastal Waters, p. 42. Taylor & Francis, 2005. ISBN 0-415-39111-3
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  8. Franz Blatt, C A Christensen, K Friis Johansen. Danmarks Riges Breve, p. 109. Reitzel, 1979. ISBN 87-7421-008-4
  9. Lars Berggren, Nils Hybel, Annette Landen. Cogs, Cargoes and Commerce: Maritime Bulk Trade in Northern Europe, 1150-1400, p. 35. Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2002. ISBN 0-88844-815-5
  10. "Amager", in The Penny Cyclopædia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, p. 410. Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. C. Knight, 1833
  11. Torsten Gunnarsson (trans. Nancy Adler), Nordic Landscape Painting in the Nineteenth Century, p. 193. Yale University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-300-07041-1
  12. Frandsen, Karl-Erik. Kampen mod pesten. Karantænestationen på Saltholm 1709-11. Frydenlund, Copenhagen, 2004. ISBN 87-7887-180-8
  13. J. E. Kaufmann, Robert M. Jurga. Fortress Europe: European Fortifications of World War II. Da Capo Press, Incorporated, 2002. ISBN 0-306-81174-X
  14. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  15. Robert Gardiner, Randal Gray, Przemysław Budzbon. Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships, 1906-1921, p. 88. Conway, 1985. ISBN 0-85177-245-5
  16. Antony Preston, The Royal Navy Submarine Service: A Centennial History, p. 49 Conway Maritime Press, 2001. 0851778917
  17. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  18. Frantz Wilhelm Wendt, Cooperation in the Nordic Countries: Achievements and Obstacles, p. 204. Almqvist & Wiksell International, 1981. ISBN 91-22-00465-3
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  21. Jim Berry, Stanley McGreal, European Cities, Planning Systems and Property Markets, p. 166. Taylor & Francis, 1995. ISBN 0-419-18940-8