Bagn Bygdesamling

Bagn Bydesamling is a small museum located in the hamlet of Dolven, south of Bagn at Sør-Aurdal in Innlandet county Norway. The museum is situated in the traditional district of Valdres and is run as a subsidiary of Valdres Folkemuseum.[1]

Prestgardsboligen
parish priest residence from 1808

History

The museum was founded in 1920 on the Islandsmoen farm. It includes the farm itself, a saw mill, a flour mill, and other furnished buildings. The museum consisting of 12 log buildings and a building for permanent displays. The collection was donated to the village in 1941 by Olaus Islandsmoen, a local politician and educator. Additionally, the museum has exhibition about composer Sigurd Islandsmoen and an exhibition about the author Mikkjel Fønhus.[2][3]

The museum contains a preserved farm, a saw with water stream and a neighborhood school with an original interior. The museum has also displays at the small farms Sandviken and Bagnsbergatn. The last one is the site of a Norwegian World War II memorial location. All the items in the museum are original and have been collected from various farms and other locations in the area. The permanent display consists of artifacts from both the Stone Age and Iron Age, textiles and clothing, furniture and kitchen items, and artifacts from the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany. [4]

Collection

  • Telthuset regimental arsenal for Ytre Valdreske Kompagni
  • Prestgardsboligen priest farm house
  • Stabelbygningen building for tenant farmer living in Perstgarden
  • Seterbu mountain farmhouse
  • Oppgangssag sawmill
  • Bekkekvern (mølle) watermill
  • Stabbur Storage houses
  • Smie iron works with blast furnace
  • Koie (skogshusvære) hut (forest shelter)
  • Båtnaust boathouse
  • Badstue (korntørke) sauna for corn drying

See also

References

  1. Bagn Bygdesamling(Store norske leksikon)
  2. Olaus Islandsmoen (Store norske leksikon)
  3. "Islandsmoen. Sør-Aurdal herad. Oppland". Matrikkelutkastet av 1950. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
  4. "Bagn Bygdesamling". Innovation Norway. Retrieved September 1, 2017.

60°48′17.07″N 9°33′48.96″E


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