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Haga Palace - Wikipedia
59°21′49″N 18°02′22″E / 59.36361°N 18.03944°E Haga Palace (Swedish: Haga slott), formerly known as the Queen's Pavilion (Swedish: Drottningens paviljong), is located in the Haga Park, Solna Municipality in Metropolitan Stockholm, Sweden. The palace, built between 1802 – 1805, was modelled after ballet … See more
When King Gustav III was killed in 1792, the work on his grandiose castle at Brunnsviken was cancelled and his son and successor King Gustav IV Adolf instead started … See more
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Wikipedia text under CC-BY-SA license Haga Palace and Haga Park - Unofficial Royalty
Taking a look at Haga Palace - Royal Central
WEBJun 28, 2017 · Haga Palace, the current home of the Crown Princess Family of Sweden, is located in Haga Park in Solna, Sweden. It was built in 1802 and designed by King Gustav IV Adolf’s...
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Gustav III's Pavilion - Kungliga slotten
WEBGustav III´s Pavilion at Haga Park is one of the highlights of Swedish art history and is one of the finest examples of the European Neo-Classicism of the late 1700s in Northern Europe. The pavilion was built by architect …
Haga Park - Visit Stockholm
WEBFounded by the monarch Gustav III in 1780-1797, Haga is Sweden's foremost example of an English landscape park, and one of Sweden's most popular recreational areas. It's also the site of many historical landmarks.
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