Kastelholm part 2

Kastelholm is a delightful spot, tucked under a wooded hillside, with a view of the golfers on the other side of the water and very handily placed for the footpath through the woods to the Castle and the other museums around it. The rain and wind came through our first night there, but had cleared sufficiently the next morning for us to visit these attractions. The castle has had many incarnations as it burned down several times between 1400 and 1745. Kastelholm was the centre of the Aland Islands in 1400 but over the years was taken over by rebels, plundered by Danish pirates, used as a royal hunting lodge, used to imprison King Eric XIV by his brother, reinforced during The Great Wrath (a period of domination by the Russians in the 1700s) and used as a granary. It has been heavily restored since the last fire in 1745, with the first attempt at restoration starting in 1891.
Kastelholm Castle – the girls in costume didn’t hang about out here when it started raining again
How many golfers can we hit?
After the visiting the castle we hurried through the rain, which had started up again, to Vita Bjorn, which was a prison, built in 1783 and in use until 1975. It is the oldest building of its kind preserved in Finland and it was fascinating to see the conditions under which prisoners were kept in different periods. It had been enlarged in 1893 to enable men and women to be kept in separate cells. Our visit there was considerably enhanced by the extremely knowledgeable guide, who spoke excellent English. Plenty of restraint methods used in the prison and prisoners were tied to the whipping post in view of the rest of the inmates. Women got birched and men caned
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