Linderud
{{Short description|Neighborhood in Oslo, Norway}}
File:Bydel Bjerke, Linderud & Veitvet fra Kalbakken.jpg.]]
Linderud is a neighborhood in Bjerke borough, Oslo, Norway. The area originally formed part of the estate of Linderud Manor.
==Linderud Manor==
File:Linderud gård hovedbygning2.JPG
Linderud Manor (Linderud gård) was owned by the Catholic Church before the Reformation of 1536, and thereafter by the Crown.{{cite encyclopedia|year=2007|title=Linderud|encyclopedia=Store norske leksikon|editor=Henriksen, Petter|first=Terje|last=Bratberg|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|url=http://www.snl.no/Linderud|language=Norwegian|accessdate=16 April 2009}} It was bought by Peder Griffenfeldt in 1673,{{cite encyclopedia|year=2000|title=Linderud|encyclopedia=Oslo byleksikon|edition=4|editor=Tvedt, Knut Are|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|pages=261–262|isbn=82-573-0815-3}} then by Mogens Lauritzen in 1679, and belonged to the latter's family for over a century. By the late eighteenth century, the manor was a part of a property which included vast amounts of forest, some timber industrial sites and about 350 farms.
Lauritzen's ancestor Mogens Larsen Monsen passed it down to his son-in-law Haagen Mathiesen in 1802.{{cite encyclopedia|year=2003|title=Haagen Mathiesen|encyclopedia=Norsk biografisk leksikon|first=Francis|last=Sejersted|authorlink=Francis Sejersted|volume=6|editor=Helle, Knut|editor-link=Knut Helle|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|url=http://www.snl.no/.nbl_biografi/Haagen_Mathiesen/utdypning|language=Norwegian|accessdate=11 April 2009}} Later owners include Haaken C. Mathiesen from 1875 to 1891,{{cite encyclopedia|year=2003|title=Haaken C Mathiesen|encyclopedia=Norsk biografisk leksikon|first=Francis|last=Sejersted|authorlink=Francis Sejersted|volume=6|editor=Helle, Knut|editor-link=Knut Helle|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|url=http://www.snl.no/.nbl_biografi/Haaken_C_Mathiesen/utdypning|language=Norwegian|accessdate=11 April 2009}} Christian Pierre Mathiesen from 1893 to 1940 and Jørgen Mathiesen from 1940.{{cite encyclopedia|year=2007|title=Mathiesen|encyclopedia=Store norske leksikon|editor=Henriksen, Petter|first=Terje|last=Bratberg|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|url=http://www.snl.no/Mathiesen|language=Norwegian|accessdate=16 April 2009}} Jørgen Mathiesen set up the Linderud Foundation in 1954, which now owns the main building of the manor as well as the surrounding park. Since 1960 parts of the park are preserved due to botanical value.{{cite web|url=http://dnweb12.dirnat.no/nbinnsyn/asp/faktaark.asp?iid=VV00000393|title=VV00000393, Linderud Gård|publisher=Norwegian Directorate for Nature Management|language=Norwegian|accessdate=16 April 2009|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120527001237/http://dnweb12.dirnat.no/nbinnsyn/asp/faktaark.asp?iid=VV00000393|archive-date=27 May 2012|url-status=dead}}
Neighborhood
File:Linderud senter, Oslo.jpg
File:Linderud t-banestasjon.jpg
The farmland surrounding Linderud manor was largely built in the 1950s and 1960s, eventually forming an urban neighborhood. A primary and a secondary school were constructed between 1964 and 1968,{{cite encyclopedia|year=2000|title=Linderud skole|encyclopedia=Oslo byleksikon|edition=4|editor=Tvedt, Knut Are|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|pages=262|isbn=82-573-0815-3}}{{cite encyclopedia|year=2000|title=Linderud videregående skole|encyclopedia=Oslo byleksikon|edition=4|editor=Tvedt, Knut Are|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|pages=262|isbn=82-573-0815-3}} although a school had existed in conjunction with the farming community between 1860 and 1900.{{cite encyclopedia|year=2000|title=Linderud|encyclopedia=Oslo byleksikon|edition=4|editor=Tvedt, Knut Are|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|pages=262|isbn=82-573-0815-3}} The Norwegian Military Academy is located at Linderud as well.{{cite encyclopedia|year=2007|title=Krigsskolen|encyclopedia=Store norske leksikon|editor=Henriksen, Petter|first=Torolf|last=Rein|authorlink=Torolf Rein|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|url=http://www.snl.no/Krigsskolen|language=Norwegian|accessdate=16 April 2009}} The shopping mall Linderud senter was opened in 1968, and enlarged in 1992 and 2009.{{cite news|url=http://www.groruddalen.no/hoeye-svev-i-linderudkollen.4559708-19209.html|title=Klart for nye Linderud senter|last=Skappel|first=Hanne Mari|date=23 March 2009|work=Akers Avis Groruddalen|language=Norwegian|accessdate=17 April 2009}} Since 1966 the neighborhood is served by Linderud station of the Oslo T-bane network.
=Sports=
The ski jumping hill Linderudkollen share name with the area. It actually consists of four hills, constructed in 1931, 1965 and 1995, the largest with a calculation point of seventy metres.{{cite encyclopedia|year=2000|title=Linderudkollen|encyclopedia=Oslo byleksikon|edition=4|editor=Tvedt, Knut Are|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|pages=262|isbn=82-573-0815-3}} In 2009 the quarterpipe competition Arctic Challenge was staged there.{{cite news|url=http://www.groruddalen.no/hoeye-svev-i-linderudkollen.4559708-19209.html|title=Høye svev i Linderudkollen|last=Thorsen|first=Kay Grue|date=20 February 2009|work=Akers Avis Groruddalen|language=Norwegian|accessdate=17 April 2009}} The local multi-sports team is Linderud IL, founded on 13 December 1967, which has sections for association football, team handball, floor hockey and skiing.[http://www.linderudil.no/ Official site – Linderud IL]
References
{{Reflist}}
{{commons category}}
External links
- [http://www.akersmus.no/linderud/ Linderud Manor website]
{{Coord|59|56|30.746|N|10|50|0.74040|E|source:nowiki_region:NO_type:landmark|display=title}}