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Vestfold

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Vestfold (Template:IPA) is a county and a current electoral district in Norway. Located on the western shore of the Oslofjord, it borders Buskerud and Telemark counties. The county administration is located in Tønsberg, Norway's oldest city,<ref>Norum, Roger (2011). Frommer's Norway. Frommer's. Page 4. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Evensberget, Snorre (2012). DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Norway. Penguin. Page 230. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Ham, Anthony and Stuart Butler (2015). Lonely Planet Norway. Lonely Planet. Page 87. Template:ISBN.</ref> and the largest city is Sandefjord. With the exception of the city-county of Oslo, Vestfold is the smallest county in Norway by area.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Vestfold is located west of the Oslofjord, as the name indicates. It includes many smaller, but well-known towns in Norway, such as Holmestrand, Horten, Åsgårdstrand, Tønsberg, Sandefjord, Larvik and Stavern; these towns run from Oslo in an almost constant belt of urban areas along the coast, ending in Grenland in neighbouring county Telemark. The river Numedalslågen runs through the county. Many islands are located at the coast. Vestfold is mostly dominated by lowland and is among the best agricultural areas of Norway. Winters last about three months, while pleasant summer temperatures last from May to September, with a July average high of 17 °C (63 °F).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Vestfold is traditionally known for shipping and sailing. Sandefjord was formerly a headquarters for the Norwegian whaling fleet, and Horten used to be Norway's main naval port. The coastal towns of Vestfold now engage in fishing and shipbuilding. Some lumbering is carried on in the interior. The area also includes some of the best farmland in Norway.

Vestfold was until 2019 the only county in which all municipalities had declared Bokmål to be their sole official written form of the Norwegian language.<ref>Vestfold County (Vestfold University College) Template:Webarchive</ref> From its re-establishment in 2024, Vestfold is the only county in Norway to have Bokmål as the official written form.

Vestfold merged with neighboring Telemark County on 1 January 2020 as part of a nationwide municipal reform. The new county name was Vestfold og Telemark.<ref name="snl.no">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Vestfold county was re-established on 1 January 2024, following a vote of the county council of Vestfold og Telemark on 15 February 2022 to split the newly established county into its respective counties that existed before the merger took place; Telemark and Vestfold.

Etymology

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Vestfold is the old name of the region which was revived in modern times. Fold was the old name of the Oslofjord, and the meaning of the name Vestfold is the region west of the Fold (see also Østfold). Before 1919, the county was called Jarlsberg og Larvik Amt. The amt was created in 1821, consisting of the two old counties of Jarlsberg and Larvik.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In the Viking Age, Vestfold also referred to Eiker, Drammen, Kongsberg, Lier, now in Buskerud.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="v">Vol. XIII: A History Of Norway And The Passion And Miracles of the Blessed Óláfr Template:Webarchive Anthony Faulkes and Richard Perkins (Viking Society for Northern Research), p. 128)</ref><ref>Vestfold - gammelt navn Template:Webarchive, snl.no</ref>

Vestfold Hills on Antarctica's Sørsdal Glacier is named after the county.

History

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Viking history

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File:Gokstadskipet1.jpg
Norway's largest preserved Viking ship, Gokstad ship, was discovered at Gokstad Mound, Sandefjord.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
File:Istre Hågan.jpg
Istrehågan, ancient burial ground which dates to the Roman Iron Age, 1500-500 BC<ref name="visitvestfold.com">Template:Cite web</ref>

Template:Historical populations Vestfold is mentioned for the first time in a written source in 813, when Danish kings were in Vestfold to quell an uprising amongst the Fürsts Template:Vague.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> There may have been as many as six political centers in Vestfold. At that time Kaupang, which was located in Tjølling near Larvik, had been functioning for decades and had a chieftain. Kaupang, which dates from the Viking Age, is believed to be the first town in Norway, although Tønsberg (which dates from ca. 900) is the oldest town in Norway still in existence. At Borre, there was a site for another chieftain. That site held chieftains for more than one hundred years prior to 813.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The stone mounds at Mølen have been dated to the Viking Age.<ref name="Var Vestfold Norges vugge">Template:Cite news</ref> The mounds at Haugar in present-day Tønsberg's town centre have been dated to the Viking period. At Farmannshaugen in Sem there seems to have been activity at the time, while activity at Oseberghaugen and Gokstadhaugen dates from a few decades later.Template:Citation needed

An English source from around 890 retells the voyage of Ottar (Ottar fra Hålogaland) "from the farthest North, along Norvegr via Kaupang and Hedeby to England", where Ottar places Kaupang in the land of the Dane - danenes land.<ref name="Var Vestfold Norges vugge" /> Bjørn Brandlien says that "To the degree that Harald Hårfagre gathered a kingdom after the Battle of Hafrsfjord at the end of the 9th century - that especially is connected to Avaldsnes - it does not seem to have made such a great impression on Ottar".<ref name="Var Vestfold Norges vugge" /> Kaupang is mentioned under the name of Skiringssal (Kaupangen i Skiringssal) in Ottar's tales.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

By the 10th century, the local kings had established themselves. The king or his ombudsman resided in the old Royal Court at Sæheim i Sem, today the Jarlsberg Estate (Jarlsberg Hovedgård) in Tønsberg. The farm Haugar (from Old Norse haugr meaning hill or mound) became the seat for Haugating, the Thing for Vestfold and one of Norway's most important place for the proclamation of kings.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> <ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The family of Harald Fairhair, who was most likely the first king of Norway, is said to have come from this area.

The Danish kings seem to have been weak in Vestfold from around the middle of the 9th century until the middle of the 10th century, but their rule was strengthened there at the end of the 10th century.<ref name="Var Vestfold Norges vugge" /> The Danish kings seem to have tried to control the region until the 13th century.<ref name="Var Vestfold Norges vugge" />

Kings ruling some or all of Vestfold

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File:Halvdan Svartes saga-Tittelfrise-Gerhard Munthe.jpg
Halfdan the Black, 9th century king of Vestfold. His brother was long believed to be buried at the Gokstad Mound.<ref name="Børresen, Svein E. 2004 Page 46">Børresen, Svein E. (2004). Vestfoldboka: en reise i kultur og natur. Skagerrak forl. Page 46. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Tore, Sandberg and Cato Arveschoug (2001). Sandefjord zoomet inn av fotograf Tore Sandberg. C. Arveschoug and Magne Helland. Page 40. ISBN 9788299616706.</ref><ref>Tollnes, Ivar and Olaf Akselsen (1994). Sandefjord: Den lille storbyen. Sandefjords Blad. Page 103. ISBN 9788299070447.</ref>

Whaling

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File:Sandefjord Southern Actor.jpg
Southern Actor, whale-catcher turned museum ship

Whaling was an important 19th century industry in coastal cities such as Larvik, Tønsberg, and Sandefjord, which was the world centre for the world's modern whaling industry. Not only did men from Vestfold County make up practically all the crew on the Norwegian whaling fleet, but many were also involved in the whaling industry in other nations.<ref name="Tønnessen 1982 Page 25">Tønnessen, Johan Nicolay and Arne Odd Johnsen (1982). The History of Modern Whaling. University of California Press. Page 25. Template:ISBN.</ref> As an example, the first phase of modern Australian whaling was almost entirely based on workers from Larvik.<ref>Tønnessen, Johan Nicolay and Arne Odd Johnsen (1982). The History of Modern Whaling. University of California Press. Page 222. Template:ISBN.</ref> While the first whaling station in the Faroe Islands was established by Sandefjordians,<ref>Joensen, Jóan Pauli (2009). Pilot Whaling in the Faroe Islands: History, Ethnography, Symbol. Faroe University Press. Page 225. Template:ISBN.</ref> Larvik played a similar role for the Shetland Islands. Tønsberg initiated much of the whaling industry in Iceland and the Hebrides.<ref>Tønnessen, Johan Nicolay and Arne Odd Johnsen (1982). The History of Modern Whaling. University of California Press. Page 84. Template:ISBN.</ref>

The largest settlement in South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, Grytviken, was established by Carl Anton Larsen of Sandefjord on 16 November 1904.<ref>Headland, Robert (1992). The Island of South Georgia. CUP Archive. Page 130. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Sandefjordian Nils Larsen's expeditions to Antarctica in the early 20th century led to the Norwegian annexation of Bouvet Island (1927) and Peter I Island (1929). A cove on Peter I Island is named Sandefjord Cove in honor of Nils Larsen's hometown.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Sandefjord Harbor is now home to Southern Actor, the only whale-catcher from the Modern Whaling Epoch still to be in its original order.<ref name="https://snl.no/Sandefjord">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="ReferenceA">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="ReferenceB">Template:Cite web</ref> The museum ship is owned by Sandefjord Whaling Museum, Europe's only museum dedicated to whaling.<ref name="Philpott, Don 1991 Page 76">Philpott, Don (1991). Visitor's Guide: Norway. Moorland. Page 76. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref name="The Whaling Museum">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Hvalfangstmuseet">Template:Cite web</ref> Sandefjord has been named the centre of the Modern Whaling Epoch,<ref>Holskjær, Lars (2017). Kamper uten tall. Forlagshuset i Vestfold. Page 8. Template:ISBN.</ref> and has been nicknamed "the whaling capital of the world."<ref>Engel, Lyle Kenyon (1963). Scandinavia: A Simon & Schuster Travel Guide. Cornerstone Library. Page 145.</ref><ref>Ryder, Simon and Cameron Duffy (2018). Insight Guides Norway. Insight Guides. Page 163. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Alspaugh, Emmanuelle (2006). Fodor's Norway. Fodor's Travel Publications. Page 73. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Bertelsen, Hans Kristian (1985). Sandefjord: A modern city with vast potential. Grafisk Studio. Page 81. Template:ISBN.</ref>

Geography

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File:CairnInMoelen.jpg
Mølen, Scandinavia's first UNESCO Global Geopark

Vestfold is Norway's smallest county, with the exception of the city-county of Oslo. It lies on the western shore of the Oslofjord. Vestfold borders with Buskerud County in the north and with Telemark County in the west. It is bordered by Skagerrak in the North Sea to both the south and east. The county has a total area of Template:Convert and has a Template:Convert coastline. Vestfjellet at Template:Convert is the tallest peak in the county. It is also home to 1,407 islands.<ref name="snl.no" /> Nøtterøy (Template:Convert) is the largest island in Vestfold, while Tjøme (Template:Convert) is the second-largest island.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Bertelsen, Hans Kristian 1998 Page 191">Bertelsen, Hans Kristian (1998). Bli kjent med Vestfold / Become acquainted with Vestfold. Stavanger Offset AS. Page 191. Template:ISBN.</ref>

There is a total of 634 freshwater lakes in Vestfold, with a total area of 79 square kilometers. Large lakes include Farris, Eikeren, Goksjø, Hallevannet, Akersvannet, and others. Vestfold makes up 0.7 percent of Norway's total land area. Ten Norwegian municipalities are larger in size than Vestfold County.<ref name="Bertelsen, Hans Kristian 1998 Page 191" /> As an example, Kautokeino Municipality in Finnmark County is over four times larger than Vestfold County. Finnmark county is 22 times larger than Vestfold county.

Geology

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File:Bjørnhodet, Fuglevik (14424799377).jpg
Nøtterøy is the largest island in Vestfold.
File:Færdernasjonalparksenter.jpg
Visitor Center at World's End in Færder National Park

The county's soft soil is composed of varieties of moraine and sedimentary soils. The Ice Age left large parts of Vestfold below sea level, and the most cultivated soil can be found on the marine terraces. Marine clay and sand cover most of the lower lying country in the south-west and north. The Vestfold moraine, a continuation of the Østfold moraine at Moss, is an ice-formed formation which stretches as a cohesive gravel ridge through the county, from Horten in the east to Mølen in the south.<ref name="Bertelsen, Hans Kristian 1998 Page 191" />

Preserved areas

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Færder National Park was the county's first national park when the decision was formalized by King Harald V on 23 August 2013.<ref name="snl.no" /><ref name="norwaypost.no">Template:Cite web</ref> The visitor center is at World's End, and was officially opened by Queen Sonja on 26 June 2015.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="ReferenceC">Template:Cite web</ref> The national park lies in Nøtterøy- and Tjøme municipalities, and is made up of Template:Convert of ocean and Template:Convert of land. It stretches from Ormøy in the north to Færder Lighthouse in the south.<ref name="ReferenceC" /> It is one of two marine national parks in Norway, and is made up of coast, skerries, islands and sea bed.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Mølen in Larvik is home to Norway's largest stone beach<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and is an ancient burial site consisting of 230 cairns, some exceeding Template:Convert in diameter. Excavations have dated the rock piles to about 250 A.D.<ref name="atlasobscura.com">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It was the first UNESCO Global Geopark in the Nordics when established in 2008.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="vestfoldguide.no">Template:Cite web</ref> Mølen is one of Larvik's most popular tourist attractions. It is home to over a hundred species of rock, including Norway's national stone, Larvikite, which is named from the area. It is a crucially important seabird habitat, where over 316 species of bird have been recorded.<ref>https://issuu.com/visitvestfold/docs/visit_larvik_2018-2019_webTemplate:Dead link (Page 26).</ref><ref name="ReferenceD">Template:Cite web</ref>

Municipalities in Vestfold County
Municipalities in Vestfold County

Municipalities

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Vestfold has experienced a large reduction in number of municipalities. As of 1949, the county was home to 19 rural municipalities and 7 city municipalities. There were 14 municipalities as of 2016, but the number decreased to 6 as of 2024. Vestfold has the least amount of municipalities of any county in Norway.

  1. Holmestrand Municipality
  2. Horten Municipality
  3. Tønsberg Municipality
  4. Færder Municipality
  5. Sandefjord Municipality
  6. Larvik Municipality

Towns and cities

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Template:Main Template:Div col

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Villages

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Parishes

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Template:Div col

  • Andebu
  • Arnadal (Arendal)
  • Berg
  • Borre
  • Botne
  • Brunlanes
  • Fon
  • Fredricksværn, see Stavern
  • Hedrum
  • Hem
  • Hillestad
  • Hof
  • Holmestrand
  • Horten
  • Hvarnes
  • Høyjord
  • Kjose
  • Kodal
  • Konnerud
  • Kvelde
  • Langestrand
  • Lardal
  • Larvik
  • Nykirke
  • Nøtterøy
  • Ramnes
  • Sandar
  • Sande
  • Sandefjord
  • Sandeherred, see Sandar
  • Sankt Laurentii
  • Sem
  • Skjee
  • Skoger
  • Slagen
  • Stavern
  • Stokke
  • Strømm (Strømmen)
  • Strømsgodset
  • Styrvoll
  • Svarstad
  • Svelvik
  • Tanum
  • Tjølling
  • Tjøme
  • Tønsberg
  • Undrumsdal
  • Valløy
  • Vassås
  • Vivestad
  • Vor Frue (Maria)
  • Våle
  • Åsgårdstrand
  • Larvik Branch (LDS, early-1927)
  • Tønsberg Branch (LDS, early-1951)
  • Larvik (Katolske Apostoliske, 1888–1963)

Template:Div col end

Former municipalities

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Template:Div col Template:Main

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Political strength

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Results from parliamentary elections in Vestfold County since 1973:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Bold letters represent the alliances (Leftwing Ap+SV. Centre KrF+V+Sp. Rightwing H+Frp). M = Number of elected parliamentarians.

Year Ap SV Total M KrF V Sp Total M H Frp Total M
1973 33,8 8,9 42,7 3 10,3 3,0 7,6 20,9 2 26,5 6,6 33,1 2
1977 39,8 2,6 42,4 3 10,2 2,8 7,2 20,2 1 33,7 2,0 35,7 3
1981 33,9 2,9 36,8 3 8,2 3,2 4,2 15,6 0 41,9 4,7 46,6 4
1985 35,4 4,0 39,4 3 7,0 2,7 4,4 14,1 1 40,9 4,8 45,7 3
1989 30,1 8,3 38,4 4 7,1 2,7 4,5 14,3 0 28,9 16,5 45,4 3
1993 35,4 6,5 41,9 3 6,9 2,7 13,2 22,8 1 23,1 10,3 33,2 3
1997 33,5 5,3 38,8 3 12,5 3,2 5,6 21,3 1 18,1 20,1 38,2 3
2001 21,6 11,6 33,2 3 11,0 2,8 3,3 17,1 1 25,5 18,7 44,2 4
2005 30,2 8,4 38,6 4 6,0 5,0 3,6 14,6 0 15,3 29,3 44,6 3
2009 33,7 6,5 40,2 4 4,7 3,0 3,2 10,9 0 19,6 27,2 46,8 3
2013 29,6 3,8 33,4 2 4,9 4,5 3,0 12,4 1 30,0 19,5 49,5 4
2017 28,0 5,0 33,0 2 3,7 3,8 6,3 13,8 1 30,1 16,9 47,0 4

Demographics

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Template:Bar box According to Statistics Norway, Vestfold County was home to 244,967 residents as of 1 January 2016.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Immigrants made up 11.9 percent of the population in 2017.<ref name="auto">Template:Cite web</ref> Most immigrants were from Poland (4,287 people), followed by Lithuania (2,794) and Iraq (1,549).<ref name="auto"/> Despite its small size, Vestfold had the third-highest population density in Norway.<ref name="snl.no" /> However, the population density may still have been considered low; as an example, the population density of the Netherlands was four times higher than that of Vestfold County in 1998.<ref name="Bertelsen, Hans Kristian 1998 Page 191" />

Sandefjord was the most populous city of Vestfold County;<ref name="https://snl.no/Sandefjord" /> one in four people from Vestfold were from Sandefjord, or 25.2 percent of the county population.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Economy

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File:Sandefjord Jotun fabrikker IMG 6040.jpg
Jotun is one of the world's largest manufacturers of paints and coating products.<ref>C. Gopalkrishnan (2016). The Entrepreneur's Choice: Cases on Family Business in India. Routledge. Page 243. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Traditional industries in Vestfold have included whaling and ship building. For over 50 years in the 19th century, Sandefjord and partially Tønsberg functioned as the world centre for the whaling industry.<ref name="Tønnessen 1982 Page 25" /> However, whaling ended in the 1960s and the ship building industry has gradually reduced since the 1980s. Information technology is currently a growing industry, and the county is home to large web shops such as Komplett, MPX.no and netshop.no. 18.9 percent of the county's total area is used for agriculture, the highest percentage of any county in Norway. 70% of agricultural lands are used for the cultivation of grains.<ref name="snl.no" /> Vestfold's farming area makes up five percent of Norway's cultivated areas. However, by area, Vestfold only makes up 0.7 percent of Norway's land area.<ref name="Bertelsen, Hans Kristian 1998 Page 191" />

Vestfold has Norway's most expensive vacation homes. Sandefjord had Norway's most expensive vacation homes in 2012, while Tjøme had the most expensive homes as of 2010.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> General property values appreciated 28.3 percent between 2010 and 2015.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Tourism

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File:Tjøme Lilleskagen badestrand.JPG
Lilleskagen Beach at Hvasser in Færder
File:Brygga i Tønsberg.JPG
The harbor in Tønsberg
File:Nevlunghavn - brygga.jpg
The pier in Nevlunghavn, the southernmost point in mainland Vestfold (excluding islands).<ref>Lund, Arild and Charlotte Jørgensen (2001). Larvik. Capella Media. Page 67. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Bertelsen, Hans Kristian (1998). Bli kjent med Vestfold / Become acquainted with Vestfold. Stavanger Offset AS. Page 48. Template:ISBN.</ref>

Summer tourism is an important industry in Vestfold, particularly in coastal communities such as Sandefjord, Tjøme and Stavern. Coastal cities also have large numbers of vacation homes. There were 534,724 hotel stays in 2015, where the purpose was vacationing for 236,895. Most international tourists were from the United Kingdom, Sweden, and Denmark. There were 781,459 stays at rental cabins or campgrounds in 2015.<ref name="snl.no" /> Consequentially, the population increases drastically during summer months in municipalities such as Sandefjord,<ref>Jøranlid, Marianne (1996). 40 trivelige turer i Sandefjord og omegn. Vett Viten. Page 27. Template:ISBN.</ref> Tjøme, and elsewhere. The population at Tjøme goes from 4,500 to around 50,000 each summer.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The population of islands such as Tjøme often quadruple during summer,<ref name="ReferenceE">Template:Cite web</ref> while summer communities as Stavern often sees a doubling or tripling.<ref name="Evensberget, Snorre 2014 Page 129">Evensberget, Snorre (2014). DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Norway. Penguin. Page 129. Template:ISBN.</ref> Tjøme Island is home to nearly as many vacation homes as residential homes.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

While Tjøme has the nickname Sommerøya ("the Summer Island"),<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Sandefjord is nicknamed Badebyen ("the Bathing City") due to its many beaches and former spas.<ref>Alspaugh, Emmanuelle (2006). Fodor's Norway. Fodor's Travel Publications. Pages F-7 and 73. Template:ISBN.</ref> Sandefjord is known for its many great beaches,<ref>McKay, D. (2004). Fodor's Scandinavia. Fodor's Travel Publications. Page 398. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Alspaugh, Emmanuelle (2006). Fodor's Norway. Fodor's Travel Publications. Page 74. Template:ISBN.</ref> and it is primarily known as a summer resort community.<ref>Berman, Martha (1995). Fielding's Scandinavia. Fielding Worldwide. Page 240. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It first became a bathing destination when sulphur was discovered in 1837.<ref>Ebbesen, Jorgen Tandberg (2018). The Sulphureous Bath at Sandefjord in Norway. Sagwan Press. Page 18. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref name="https://snl.no/Sandefjord" /> The city gained further recognition when Sandefjord Sulfur Spa and Resort (Kurbadet) was established in 1837. The bath was one of the most visited in Europe during the late 19th century.<ref name="Jøranlid, Marianne 1996 Page 36">Jøranlid, Marianne (1996). 40 trivelige turer i Sandefjord og omegn. Vett Viten. Page 36. Template:ISBN.</ref>

Vestfold's most visited tourist attractions include Borre mound cemetery, the largest burial site in Northern Europe, as well as numerous sites along the coast. Architectural sites include the villages of Åsgårdstrand, Karljohansvern in Horten, and Fredriksvern in Stavern. Other important attractions are Sandefjord Whaling Museum, Mølen Geopark in Larvik, as well as Tønsberg Fortress (Slottsfjellet) in Tønsberg.<ref name="snl.no" />

Largest companies

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Largest companies in Vestfold County based on operating income in 2015:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

No. Company Operating income
in 2015 (in NOK)
1 Jotun A/S 16 844 327
2 Komplett AS 7 256 700
3 Kongsberg Maritime AS 6 957 840
4 Asko Vestfold Telemark AS 4 617 791
5 Sykehuset i Vestfold HF 4 595 010

Culture

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File:Høyjord stavkirke tak.jpg
Høyjord Stave Church, Vestfold's only stave church. Its chancel dates to year 1100.<ref>Bertelsen, Hans Kristian (1998). Bli kjent med Vestfold / Become acquainted with Vestfold. Stavanger Offset AS. Page 113. Template:ISBN.</ref>
File:Tønsberg - tower and ruins.JPG
Tower at Tønsberg Fortress in Tønsberg

Vestfold is the county in Norway with the most traces from the Viking Age.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Examples include the Oseberg- and Gokstad Burial Mounds. While the Oseberg Ship was discovered in Tønsberg, the Gokstad Ship was discovered in Sandefjord. The Gokstad Ship is Norway's largest preserved Viking ship. Both ships are now located at the Viking Ship Museum in Oslo. Additional burial mounds are found at Borre mound cemetery and Mølen, an UNESCO Global Geopark. Borre mound cemetery is home to Northern Europe's largest burial mound site from Viking Age.<ref name="snl.no" />

Vestfold is home to 21 churches dating to medieval times. It is also home to one stave church, Høyjord Stave Church in Andebu (Sandefjord). Nearby Andebu Church also has Norway's oldest parish register, dating to 1623.<ref name="https://snl.no/Sandefjord" /> The city of Sandefjord proper is home to Europe's only museum dedicated to whaling, Sandefjord Museum in the city centre.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This museum also owns Southern Actor, a whale-catcher turned museum ship. Southern Actor is the only whale-catcher from the Modern Whaling Epoch still to be in its original working order.<ref name="ReferenceA" /><ref name="ReferenceB" /> Also at Sandefjord Harbor is the Harbour Chapel (Bryggekapellet), which is the only floating church in Norway<ref>Davidsen, Roger (2008). Et Sted i Sandefjord. Sandar Historielag. Pages 309 and 370. Template:ISBN.</ref> and most likely Europe,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> perhaps the only floating church in the world.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The city of Tønsberg is Norway's oldest city, most likely founded in year 871.<ref>Schandy, Tom and Tom Helgesen (2012). Naturperler i Vestfold. Forlaget Tom & Tom v/Schandy. Page 100. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref name="ReferenceE" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Tønsberg is home to Tønsberg Fortress, which is Scandinavia's largest ruin site. It includes ruins from Castrum Tunsbergis, Norway's largest castle in the 13th century. An outdoor music festival is held at Tønsberg Fortress every July.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="ReferenceE" /> Ruins of a German fortress can be seen at Folehavna Fort on West Island, Sandefjord.<ref name="ReferenceF">Template:Cite web</ref>

Transportation

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File:Color Viking IMG 5218 imo 8317942.JPG
Daily ferries by Color Line and Fjord Line connect Sandefjord to Sweden.<ref>Fodor, Eugene (1991). Fodor's Scandinavian Cities. Fodor's Travel Publications. Page 93. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Vestfold Line is a railway line that runs from Drammen, through a number of towns in Vestfold and ending in the town of Skien in Telemark. European route E18 runs through the county roughly parallel to the railway.<ref name="Bertelsen, Hans Kristian 1998 Page 191" />

There are two international ferry connections, both operated by Color Line. Larvik is connected to the Danish town Hirtshals, the other route is between Sandefjord and Strømstad in Sweden. Fjord Line is also a ferry operator between Sandefjord and Strømstad. In addition there is a domestic route connecting Horten and Moss.

Sandefjord Airport Torp is one of Norway's largest airports.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Only Bergen- and Oslo Airports have more international flights than Torp Airport.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Despite being located 74 miles south of Oslo, Torp is sometimes called Oslo Airport Torp. It is reached with a free shuttle bus from Sandefjord Airport Station on Vestfoldbanen. Torp is regional hub for low-cost carrier Norwegian, as well as low-cost carriers Ryanair and WizzAir also operate from the airport.<ref>Macmillan (2008). Let's Go 2009 Europe. Let's Go, Inc. Page 737. Template:ISBN.</ref> Torp offers direct routes to over 30 international and domestic destinations,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> including daily flights to European cities such as London and Amsterdam.<ref name="www.sandefjord.no1">Template:Cite web</ref>

Points of interest

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Larvik

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File:Minnehallen-stavern.jpg
Hall of Remembrance (Minnehallen) outside Stavern
File:Edvard Munch's house.jpg
Edvard Munch's former summer house at Åsgårdstrand
  • Bøkeskogen, world's northernmost beech tree forest.<ref>Bertelsen, Hans Kristian (1998). Bli kjent med Vestfold / Become acquainted with Vestfold. Stavanger Offset AS. Page 63. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref name="ReferenceG">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Ham 2015 Page 91">Ham, Anthony and Stuart Butler (2015). Lonely Planet Norway. Lonely Planet. Page 91. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Schmidt, Martin (2020). Norwegen. Reise Know-How Verlag Peter Rump. Page 113. Template:ISBN.</ref>
  • Kaupang, home to remains for the oldest Nordic town yet discovered. The remains are from one of Scandinavia's earliest urban sites, established in year 800 A.D.<ref name="Skre, Dagfinn 2007 Page 13">Skre, Dagfinn (2007). Kaupang in Skiringssal. Aarhus University Press. Page 13. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref name="Doreen, Taylor-Wilkie 2018 Page 157">Doreen, Taylor-Wilkie (2018). Insight Guides Norway. Insight. Page 157. Template:ISBN.</ref>
  • Mølen, Scandinavia's first UNESCO Global Geopark.
  • Nevlunghavn and Helgeroa, adjacent coastal villages.
  • Larvik Museum
  • Fritzøehus, largest privately owned estate in Norway.<ref>Aadnevik, Kjell-Einar (2019). Turguide til Larvik og Omegn. Dreyers forlag. Page 92. ISBN 9788282654418.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • Stavern, small coastal town, home of Citadell Island
    • Fredriksvern, Norway's main naval base from the mid-1750s until 1864.<ref name="Evensberget, Snorre 2014 Page 129" />
    • Minnehallen (Hall of Remembrance), largest monument in Vestfold.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Horten

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Tønsberg and Færder

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File:Slottsfjelltårnet TBG.jpg
Tønsberg Fortress contains ruins from Norway's largest 13th century castle.<ref>Børresen, Svein E. (2004). Vestfoldboka: en reise i kultur og natur. Skagerrak forl. Page 55. Template:ISBN.</ref>

Sandefjord

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File:Gokstadhaugen.jpg
Viking chieftain Olaf Geirstad-Alf was buried at the Gokstad Mound.<ref name="Børresen, Svein E. 2004 Page 46" /><ref>Tore, Sandberg and Cato Arveschoug (2001). Sandefjord zoomet inn av fotograf Tore Sandberg. C. Arveschoug and Magne Helland. Page 40. Template:ISBN.</ref>

Archaeological sites

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File:Istrehågan, Tjølling (14550732106).jpg
The rock settings at Istrehågan resemble a ship.<ref name="Davidsen, Roger 2008 Page 144">Davidsen, Roger (2008). Et Sted i Sandefjord. Sandar Historielag. Page 144. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Lund, Arild and Charlotte Jørgensen (2001). Larvik. Capella Media. Page 16. Template:ISBN.</ref>
File:Borreparken, gravhaug, Horten kommune, Vestfold.jpg
Borre National Park is home to Scandinavia's<ref>Nickel, Phyllis and Hans Jakob Valderhaug (2017). Norwegian Cruising Guide—Vol 2: Sweden, West Coast and Norway, Swedish Border to Bergen. Attainable Adventure Cruising Ltd. Page 86. Template:ISBN.</ref> and Northern Europe's largest burial mound site.<ref name="snl.no" />

Istrehågan

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Template:Main Istrehågan is an ancient burial ground which dates to the Roman Iron Age around 1500-500 BCE.<ref name="visitvestfold.com" /> It is located at Jåberg in Tjølling, on the border between Sandefjord and Larvik.<ref>Jøranlid, Marianne (1996). 40 trivelige turer i Sandefjord og omegn. Vett Viten. Page 123. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref name="Davidsen, Roger 2008 Page 144" /> The rock settings at Istrehågan resemble a ship. It is Template:Convert long, and Template:Convert meters broad. Archaeological excavations made in 1959-61 uncovered remains of bones, bear claws, pottery shards, a brooch, and more.<ref>https://www.visitvestfold.com/Images/Bilder%20Visit%20Vestfold/Vestfold/Dokumenter/viking_trail_engelsk_web_951579.pdf Template:Webarchive (Page 8).</ref> At Haugen farm on the Sandefjord side is Vestfold County's largest collection of petroglyphs.<ref>Børresen, Svein E. (2004). Vestfoldboka: en reise i kultur og natur. Skagerrak forl. Page 38. Template:ISBN.</ref>

Borre National Park

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File:Redskaper fra Kaupang.jpg
Tools found by archeologists at Kaupang

At Borrehaugene near Borrre there are 9 large mounds and around 30 smaller ones.<ref name="Var Vestfold Norges vugge" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It is the largest burial mound site in Northern Europe.<ref name="snl.no" />

Borre mound cemetery most likely contains graves belonging to kings of the Yngling dynasty. It is mentioned in the poem Ynglingatal as the burial site of one of two kings belonging to the royal dynasty of the Ynglingas.<ref>Carver, M.O.H. (1992). The Age of Sutton Hoo: The Seventh Century in North-Western Europe. Boydell Press. Page 301. Template:ISBN.</ref>

Kaupang

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Template:Main Kaupang in Skiringssal (Larvik) is home to remains from the oldest Nordic town yet discovered.<ref name="Doreen, Taylor-Wilkie 2018 Page 157" /> It was a trade centre established around year 800, making it one of Scandinavia's earliest urban sites. The settlement was abandoned in the mid-10th century.<ref name="Skre, Dagfinn 2007 Page 13" /> It is located in Kaupang Bay in Viksfjord, Larvik. Archeological finds include melting pots, jewelry parts, casting moulds and casting models.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Most of Kaupang remains not excavated.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> There are replicas of Viking homes at Kaupang today, giving insight to how homes were constructed during the Viking Age.<ref>https://issuu.com/visitvestfold/docs/visit_larvik_2018-2019_webTemplate:Dead link (Page 23).</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Oseberg Burial Mound

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File:Le bateau viking dOseberg (4835828216).jpg
The 22-meter (72 ft.) Oseberg Ship was excavated in Tønsberg.

Oseberg Mound is located in Tønsberg and is where the Oseberg Ship was discovered. The ship, which dates to 834 A.D., had a length of Template:Convert. Two female skeletons were found in the ship's burial chamber.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Viking burial site at Gulli

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Gulli, outside Tønsberg, was the site of an archaeological excavation during the period from 2003 to 2004, prior to asphalt being laid for constructing the new E18 (road).<ref name="En ganske vanlig mann">Template:Cite news</ref> There were 60 graves - 20 of those were preserved to a degree that [authorities decided] permitted examinations.<ref name="En ganske vanlig mann" /> "Perhaps the most spectacular [item] was a høvre" - used with a horse's harness. "There are few of those in Norway - one in Trøndelag and a gilded one found in Borre".<ref name="En ganske vanlig mann" /> The artifacts are on display at the Midgard Historical Centre in Borre.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> <ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Fevang

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19th century archeologists were struck by the many burial mounds and artifacts discovered at Fevang near Torp Airport in Sandefjord. Local farmers had discovered various artifacts in the 19th- and early 20th centuries. Archeologist Nicolay Nicolaysen traveled to Fevang and concluded that Fevang was home to an array of ancient burial mounds. Nicolaysen further discovered that Fevang had been an active graveyard for over 1,000 years - since year 0 A.D. until the first Christian cemeteries were established. Among the artifacts discovered were a gold jewel named Berlokk, which was retrieved in a woman's grave along with two gold beads, two blue glass beads, a hairpin, ceramic, burnt bones, and two clips of bronze. Her tomb is dated to the Old Iron Age, around 0-400 A.D.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Gokstad Mound

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File:Gokstad.jpg
Interpretive signs at Gokstad Mound
File:Moelen Larvik.jpg
Burial mound at Mølen dated to the Bronze Age

Gokstad Mound in Sandefjord was where the Gokstad Ship was excavated by Nicolay Nicolaysen in 1880.<ref>Jøranlid, Marianne (1996). 40 trivelige turer i Sandefjord og omegn. Vett Viten. Page 106. Template:ISBN.</ref> The skeleton of a man was found in the ship, long believed to be Olaf Geirstad-Alf, former king of Vestfold and half-brother of Halfdan the Black, the father of Harald Fairhair, Norway's first king. However, recent discoveries have increased uncertainty and it therefore remains unknown what chieftain was buried at Gokstad.<ref name="visitnorway.com">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Davidsen, Roger (2008). Et Sted i Sandefjord. Sandar Historielag. Page 210. Template:ISBN.</ref>

The ship, which is the largest found in Norway, is currently located at the Viking Ship Museum in Oslo. The Template:Convert ship was buried along with numerous gifts, including weapons, jewels, a gaming board, fish-hooks, 64 shields, six beds, three smaller boats and kitchen utensils. Twelve horses, eight dogs, two goshawks and two peacocks were also discovered in the grave.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Interpretive signs have been put up at the mound and Gaia, an exact replica of the Gokstad Ship, can be seen on Museum's Wharf at Sandefjord Harbor.<ref>Jøranlid, Marianne (1996). 40 trivelige turer i Sandefjord og omegn. Vett Viten. Page 24. Template:ISBN.</ref>

Mølen

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File:Gravhaug.jpg
Bøkeskogen is home to one of Norway's largest burial grounds from the Iron Age.<ref name="ReferenceG" />

The Old Norse word Mol translates to cairns, a site often used by ancient peoples to mark a burial site. Mølen, which is Norway's largest stone beach, is home to 230 cairns, which have been built over ages. Some cairns have been dated to 250 A.D.<ref name="atlasobscura.com" /><ref name="ReferenceD" /> The isthmus of Mølen is home to stone piles, grave mounds, and stone settings, which are all part of a protected historic site. The last Ice Age pushed large amounts of gravel and stones ahead of it, and deposited it as a moraine through all of Vestfold, known as Vestfoldraet. Raet meets the ocean at Mølen, where the moraine sinks into the sea. Its encounter with the Skagerrak ocean waves has uncovered and polished the huge round stone floor for centuries.<ref>Bertelsen, Hans Kristian (1998). Bli kjent med Vestfold / Become acquainted with Vestfold. Stavanger Offset AS. Page 54. Template:ISBN.</ref>

Bøkeskogen

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Template:Main Besides being the largest beech tree forest in Norway, and the most northernmost beech tree forest in the world,<ref name="Ham 2015 Page 91" /> Bøkeskogen is also an important archeological area. 83-90 burial mounds have been discovered in the forest. Some of these include the largest burial grounds from the Pre-Roman Iron Age in Vestfold County.<ref name="https://snl.no/Larvik">Template:Cite web</ref>

Recreation

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File:Moelen3.jpg
Hiking trail at Mølen GeoPark in Larvik

At least 238 kilometers of coastal hiking trails can be found in Vestfold County, from Larvik in the south to Svelvik in the north.<ref>Larsen, Erlend (2011). På Tur i Vestfold del 2. E-forlag. Page 234. Template:ISBN.</ref> Hiking trails are found throughout the county, including at World's End in Færder National Park. Furthermore, there is a 35 km (22 mi.) marked trail between the towns of Stavern and Helgeroa. Mølen, Kjærrafossen and Bøkeskogen are also home to various trails. Tønsberg Barrel, an old beacon dated to Sverris saga in the Middle Ages,<ref>Larsen, Erlend (2011). På Tur i Vestfold del 2. E-forlag. Pages 297-298. Template:ISBN.</ref> sits at Yxnøy on Sandefjord's East Island. West Island is home to Folehavna Fort and additional trails.<ref>https://issuu.com/visitvestfold/docs/visit_larvik_2018-2019_webTemplate:Dead link (Page 73).</ref> Combined, the trails on Sandefjord's East- and West Islands are 45 km (28 mi.), and a part of the international North Sea Trail.<ref>Mšbius, Aaron and Michael (2014). Norwegen. DuMont Reiseverlag. Page 168. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Bøkeskogen in Larvik is home to various trails, varying from 2.6 km (1.6 mi.) to 10 km (6.2 mi.) in length.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Fauna

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File:Lynx lynx2.jpg
European Lynx is found throughout Vestfold, including Tønsberg and Sandefjord.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="nrk.no">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="sb.no">Template:Cite web</ref>

Vestfold's fauna includes species such as the White-tailed eagle, Roe deer, Moose, European hedgehog, Eurasian eagle-owl, Mountain hare, European badger, European pine marten, and Norway lemming. Rare observations of Gray wolf, European lynx,<ref name="nrk.no" /><ref name="sb.no" /> and Brown bear do occur.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> A wolf shot in Lardal in 2013 was the first wolf killed in the county in over 100 years.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Between 700 and 800 moose are annually hunted in Vestfold.<ref name="snl.no" /> Larvik has one of the highest numbers of moose in Norway.<ref name="https://snl.no/Larvik" />

The Harbor seal is the most commonly observed species of seal in Vestfold, and it was estimated to be at minimum 183 seals in Vestfold as of August 2014.<ref>https://prosjekt.fylkesmannen.no/Documents/Jomfruland/Dokument/Rapporter/Minirapport%20om%20sel%20i%20forbindelse%20med%20arbeidet%20med%20Jomfruland%20nasjonalpark.pdf Template:Webarchive (Page 2).</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Dolphins are uncommon, however, a Common bottlenose dolphin was observed by Nøtterøy in 2014,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and a Striped dolphin was observed the same summer at Helgeroa in Larvik.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Common European Viper is the only venomous snake found in Norway.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> There are two non-venomous snake species in Vestfold County: European grass snake and European smooth snake.<ref>Larsen, Erlend (2012). På tur i Vestfold: Del 2. E-forlag. Page 10. Template:ISBN.</ref>

Vestfold has a rich avifauna: over 130 bird species have been observed in Svelvik,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> while Mølen in Larvik has the national record of 320 species.<ref name="vestfold.guide">Template:Cite web</ref>

Wildlife refuge

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Saltstein is part of a protected habitat for birds.<ref name="Saltstein">Template:Cite web</ref> From 2014 surfing was permitted off Saltstein.<ref name="Saltstein" />

Besides being an UNESCO Global Geopark, Mølen in Larvik is a habitat for a variety of rare bird species.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Mølen became a protected sanctuary for birds in 1970.<ref name="vestfoldguide.no" /> 320 species of birds have been recorded at Mølen, more species than at any other site in Norway.<ref name="vestfold.guide" /><ref>Nord, Einar and Gunnar Christie Wasberg (1999). Magiske Mølen. Larvik og omegns turistforening. Page 85. ISBN 8299524903.</ref>

Wildlife preserves include Melsom- and Hemskilen Wildlife Preserves. Hemskilen Wildlife Preserve lies on the Larvik-Sandefjord border and is an important habitat for shorebirds, geese, and Passerines.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Melsom Plant- and Wildlife Preserve in Sandefjord is home to various older oaks, some of them home to as many as 1,500 different species of insects.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Marøyskjæra Bird Preserve consists of two skerries west of Natholmen Island, which have been important nesting areas for Common tern and Common gull since the 1980s. Over 500 seagulls hatched on the islets in the 1990s.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Although not filmed in Vestfold, the City of Tønsberg appears in the films Thor (2011) and also in Captain America: The First Avenger (2011), and in Avengers: Endgame<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Some films shot in Vestfold include:

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References

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