Fåvang

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Coordinates: 61°27′20″N 10°11′40″E / 61.45556°N 10.19444°E / 61.45556; 10.19444

Fåvang church

Fåvang is a village and parish in the municipality of Ringebu municipality, in Innlandet county, Norway.

History[]

Fåvang is located in the south of the valley and traditional district of the Gudbrand Valley, 51 kilometres north of Lillehammer. On the west side of the Gudbrandsdalslågen river, about three kilometres away from the centre of Fåvang is Kvitfjell, the downhill skiing arena used in the Lillehammer Winter Olympics held in 1994. The population of the village was 687 in 2009.[1]

Particularly heavy fighting took place in Fåvang, as well as neighboring Tretten, Vinstra, Kvam, Sjoa and Otta during the Norwegian Campaign which let up to the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany. The Norwegian movie Jonny Vang was principally filmed in the town of Fåvang during 2003.

Fåvang Stave Church (Fåvang kirke) was built after the Reformation, for the most part of using materials from earlier stave churches in the valley which had been demolished. The church was probably built between 1627 and 1630. The oldest parts can be dated back to around 1150–1250.[2]

The name[]

The parish is named after the old farm Fåvang (Norse Fǫðvangr), since the first church was built there (see Fåvang Stave Church). The first element is the rivername (see also Fådalen and the old name of Lysakerelva), the last element is vangr m 'meadow'.

Notable residents[]

References[]

  1. ^ To & About Kvitfjell (Kvitfjell)
  2. ^ "Fåvang kirke". Den norske kirke. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 1 October 2017.

External links[]


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