Hanseatic Museum and Schøtstuene
This isn't just another museum display: it's the only surviving intact Hanseatic merchant house in all of Northern Europe.
About Hanseatic Museum and Schøtstuene
This isn't just another museum display: it's the only surviving intact Hanseatic merchant house in all of Northern Europe. You'll walk through the actual 1704 warehouse where German traders lived and worked for centuries, sleeping in cramped wooden bunks and conducting business deals worth fortunes in cod. The rooms remain exactly as they were abandoned, complete with original furniture, trading scales, and personal belongings that tell the story of Bergen's 400-year domination by the Hanseatic League.
The experience feels genuinely eerie as you climb narrow wooden staircases and duck through low doorways into pitch-black storage rooms. Your guide explains how 20 men shared a single room no bigger than a modern bedroom, forbidden from lighting fires or speaking Norwegian. The Schøtstuene assembly rooms next door contrast sharply: warm, communal spaces with massive fireplaces where traders could finally escape the bone-chilling warehouse conditions and conduct their secretive guild business.
Most visitors rush through in 30 minutes, but you'll miss the fascinating details about cod grading systems and medieval apprenticeship rituals. Entry costs 120 NOK for adults, and frankly, it's worth every krone for history buffs. Skip it if you're claustrophobic or uninterested in social history: the rooms are genuinely cramped and dark, just as they were 300 years ago.
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