Bøverdal or Bøverdalen is a valley in Lom Municipality in Innlandet county, Norway. The 50-kilometre (31 mi) long valley lies on the south side of the main Ottadalen valley. The valley begins at the Bøverbrean glacier, just west of the Smørstabbtindene mountains and it then follows the river Bøvra to the northeast to the village of Fossbergom where the valley ends and the river joins the river Otta. The Leirdalen and Visdalen valleys are side valleys that lead to the Bøverdalen valley. The valley is the dividing line between the Breheimen mountains to the northwest and the Jotunheimen mountains to the southeast.[1]

Bøverdal
Bøverdalen
River Bøvra in Lom
Bøverdal is located in Innlandet
Bøverdal
Bøverdal
Location of the valley
Bøverdal is located in Norway
Bøverdal
Bøverdal
Bøverdal (Norway)
Length50 km (31 mi) SW-NE
Geology
TypeRiver valley
Geography
LocationInnlandet, Norway
Population centersFossbergom, Elvesæter
Coordinates61°43′37″N 8°20′46″E / 61.72707°N 8.34612°E / 61.72707; 8.34612
RiverBøvra

For many centuries a transportation route traversed this valley which connected Eastern Norway and Western Norway. It started at Fossbergom and then it followed the valley to the southwest before crossing the Sognefjellet mountains and then entering the Bergsdalen valley which leads into the Sogn region of Western Norway.[1]

The 34-metre (112 ft) tall Saga Column (Norwegian: Sagasøyla), was erected in Bøverdalen in 1992. The history of the column is very convoluted. It started in 1926, when sculptor Wilhelm Rasmussen (1879–1965) won the competition for a column celebrating the Norwegian Constitution. The monument (Eidsvollsmonumentet) was originally intended to be placed by the Norwegian parliament in Oslo. The column shows the history of Norway from the time of the first king, Harald Fairhair in 872 to the first national assembly Riksforsamlingen at Eidsvoll in 1814.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Thorsnæs, Geir, ed. (18 November 2021). "Bøverdalen". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 14 May 2022.
  2. ^ Haverkamp, Frode Ernst, ed. (30 December 2020). "Sagasøyla". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 14 May 2022.