Drottningholm Palace
Drottningholm Palace serves as the actual home of Sweden's royal family, making it feel refreshingly lived-in compared to other European palaces turned museums.
About Drottningholm Palace
Drottningholm Palace serves as the actual home of Sweden's royal family, making it feel refreshingly lived-in compared to other European palaces turned museums. You'll tour about 30 rooms spanning 300 years of royal taste, from the baroque State Apartments where King Carl XVI Gustaf still receives guests, to Queen Hedvig Eleonora's ornate bedroom with its original 1600s ceiling frescoes. The Chinese Pavilion, a rococo fantasy built as a birthday surprise in 1753, houses the most impressive collection of 18th-century chinoiserie outside Asia.
The palace visit flows chronologically through Swedish royal history, starting in the grand Ehrenstrahl Gallery where massive battle paintings dwarf visitors. Each room tells a story: you'll see bullet holes in mirrors from a 1792 assassination plot, and the library where Gustav III wrote his plays before his own dramatic murder. The formal gardens stretch endlessly toward Lake Mälaren, with geometric hedges that look pristine even in winter. Inside, the silence feels profound, broken only by your footsteps on original parquet floors.
Most guides won't tell you the State Apartments close randomly for royal functions, so check the website morning-of. Skip the overpriced palace café (SEK 180 for mediocre lunch) and bring snacks for the gardens instead. The Court Theatre costs extra (SEK 120) but it's genuinely spectacular, with 18th-century stage machinery that still creates thunder and lightning effects. Allow four hours total if you're doing everything, or just two for the palace and Chinese Pavilion.
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