KING GUSTAV II ADOLF STATUE, STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN

 


Sweden's first equestrian statue of King Gustav II in Gustav Adolf Torg, a public square in central Stockholm, Sweden

The bronze statue of King Gustav II Adolf in Gustav Adolf Torg (square), Stockholm, is Sweden's first equestrian (person riding a horse) monument. Adolf reigned from 1611 to 1632. He is renowned for transforming Sweden into a major European power during the Thirty Years’ War. Called the 'Lion of the North,' he was a brilliant military strategist with innovations in arms and administrative reforms that modernized Sweden’s government and economy. Born in 1594, he died in 1632 at the Lützen Battle. This statue, cast in 1778, unveiled on 17.11.1796, was created by the French-born Swedish sculptor Pierre Hubert L’Archevêque (1721–1778). The plinth was sculptured by his disciple Johan Tobias Sergel in 1906. It depicts Adolf on horseback, symbolizing his military leadership. Two bronze lions, replicas of the fourth-century originals, flank the monument. Adolf Torg, named in 1805 after the king, is Stockholm’s “power intersection,” used for royal ceremonies, political events, and military parades since the 17th century. 

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