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Runde is an island in the municipality of Herøy in Møre og Romsdal county, Norway. The island has a population of 113 people (as of 2015), and it is connected by the Runde Bridge to the island of Remøya to the south.

Runde
Runde
Location of the island
Runde
Runde (Norway)
Geography
LocationMøre og Romsdal, Norway
Coordinates62.4006°N 5.6241°E / 62.4006; 5.6241
Area6.2 km2 (2.4 sq mi)
Length4 km (2.5 mi)
Width3.5 km (2.17 mi)
Highest elevation332 m (1089 ft)
Highest pointVarden
Administration
Norway
CountyMøre og Romsdal
MunicipalityHerøy Municipality
Demographics
Population113 (2015)
Ramsar Wetland
Designated27 May 2013
Reference no.2164[1]

Runde is famous for its enormous number of birds. It is said that there are about 500,000 to 700,000 seabirds inhabiting the island, most of them are to be found in the cliffs. The Runde Environmental Centre (Norwegian: Runde Miljøsenter) is a research station at the bird island.

Runde lies on the west coast of Norway, close to towns and villages like Fosnavåg, Ulsteinvik, Volda, Ørsta, and Ålesund. This region of Norway is famous for its long fjords and steep, snow-clad mountains.


Birdlife


The birdlife on Runde is protected by the Goksøyr Mires Nature Reserve, part of the Runde Ramsar Site.[2]

NamePairs
Atlantic puffin100,000
Black-legged kittiwake50,000
Common guillemot8,000
Fulmar5,500
Razorbill3,000
Northern gannet2,500
Common shag1,500
Great skua50
White-tailed eagle20

History


Throughout the years, several ships have sunk near Runde on the Norwegian coast. Some of them are said to be ships from the Netherlands and Spain, loaded with gold and silver.

The lighthouse of Runde
The lighthouse of Runde
Runde Harbor
Runde Harbor

Akerendam Shipwreck


Part of the Runde treasure
Part of the Runde treasure

One ship from the Netherlands, the Akerendam, was a newly built vessel which set sails from an island called Texel in Netherlands on 19 January 1725. Akerendam was a part of the Dutch merchant fleet, headed for Batavia (Indonesia) loaded with gold and silver coins to be used for the trade of spices in the Far East. The ship got caught in a storm in the North Sea, and the Akerendam disappeared into the north. The ship went down on the north side of Runde, and the whole crew of 200 was lost at sea. The inhabitants of Runde started to find parts of the ship that was washed up at its shore, including dead crew members.

The wreck site was close to the shore, and during the summer of 1725 four chests and other parts of the cargo were salvaged. But then the divers gave up, and the wreck was forgotten. During the 19th century, locals often found coins at the shore. But the origin was already forgotten, and the findings created the story that the coins was from the Spanish Armada of the 16th century.

The wreck was rediscovered in 1972 by sport scuba divers Bengt-Olof Gustafsson (Sweden), Stefan Persson (Sweden), and Eystein Krohn-Dale (Norway). Under the bottom vegetation of the seabed, the sand bottom was littered with encrusted coins. The following year, the site was investigated by Bergen Sjøfartsmuseum. Little remained of the ship but more than 500 kilograms (1,100 lb) of gold and silver was salvaged. In total about 57,000 coins were found; 6,600 of them being gold coinsmostly the rare 1724 Dutch Gold Ducat minted in Utrecht with only a handful known prior to this find, and the rest silver coins. Parts of the treasure are kept at Bergen Sjøfartsmuseum in Bergen and also at the Norwegian Coin Museum in Oslo.

The finders were allowed to keep two thirds of the treasure, which was later sold to collectors worldwide. The 1724 Utrecht Gold Ducats can command $750 to $1,000 each and are all in uncirculated quality, the highest graded ones are NGC / PCGS MS-63. The Norwegian state received 25% and the Netherlands received 7% of the treasure. This event later initiated a new legislation, making all wrecks older than 100 years automatically protected in Norway.


Runde Environmental Centre


The Runde Environmental Centre is a research station on Runde which has 4 main activities: a marine station, a house and hub for small spin-off businesses, an information centre, and a conference/overnight centre with 34 hotel-standard rooms in 8 apartment suites. In 2008, the Runde Tourist office at Runde Environmental Centre was founded.


See also



References



Footnotes


  1. "Runde". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  2. "Forvaltingsplan for Runde og Grasøyane fuglefredingsområde Goksøyrmyrane naturreservat Herøy og Ulstein kommunar" (in Norwegian). Molde: Fylkesmannen i Møre og Romsdal. 2013: 3. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Bibliography





На других языках


[de] Runde (Insel)

Die zur Gemeinde Herøy gehörende Insel Runde (alte Schreibweisen Rundøy oder Rundø) befindet sich an der westnorwegischen Küste im Fylke Møre og Romsdal, südwestlich von Ålesund. Die rund 100 Einwohner der Insel verteilen sich auf die Ortschaften Runde und Goksøyr.
- [en] Runde

[es] Runde

Runde es una isla en Møre og Romsdal, Noruega. La Isla tiene una población de 113 habitantes a fecha de 2015, y está conectada a la isla de Remøya por el Puente de Runde.

[fr] Runde

Runde est une île de l'archipel de Sørøyene, dans la commune de Herøy, du comté de Møre og Romsdal, à l'ouest de la Norvège. L'île est connectée par un pont à l'île de Remøya. L'île est célèbre pour accueillir une grande colonie d'oiseaux de mer sur ses falaises, estimées à 500 000 à 700 000 oiseaux. Il s'agit en majorité de macareux moine, de mouette tridactyle et de guillemot de Troïl.

[ru] Рунне

Рунне (норв. Runde) — остров на территории коммуны Херёй фюльке Мёре-ог-Ромсдал, Норвегия. Население острова составляет 102 человека (ноябрь 2011), он соединён мостом Рунне с островом Ремёй на юге.



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