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- Overnight accommodation
- Breakfast
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See calendar and prices: Super rateDiscover the beauty of Denmark's World Heritage - Nature, luxury, and tranquility. Step into our charming hotel with 55 elegant rooms, ideally located in the stunning Wadden Sea area for an unforgettable experience of pure relaxation.
Byvej 66-68 , 6261 Bradebro
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Minimum 3 days / 2 nights
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Arrival in January and February 2025
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1.78 km
The large cemetery is fenced by boulder dykes, which have been broken by buildings from earlier times in several places in the south and west. In addition to smaller openings in the south and north, there are three walled portals which form the access roads to the church and cemetery.
The church consists of apse, chancel and nave from the Romanesque period, with a late Gothic tower and sacristy as well as a Renaissance porch (functioning today as a chapel) on the north side of the church. The church, built partly of tufa and partly of brick, appears whitewashed with the exception of the tower, which is made of red brick. The roofs are all covered with lead.
The tower has a height of 104 feet or approx. 31 meters.
2.12 km
The church is from about 1250, the nave be younger. The apse and choir built in Rhenish Tuff with large bricks below and the nave is built with large bricks and inside with boulders.
3.95 km
The church is located on a small elevation north of the town of Randerup itself, and located approximately in the middle of the parish. The church dates from the Middle Ages around the year 1200.
Randerup is the birth parish of the hymn writer Hans Adolph Brorson (1694 - 1764), he was born in the rectory, which at that time was located immediately east of the church. His father was a priest at the church, as was his grandfather.
Brorson's father died in 1704, when H. A. Brorson was barely 10 years old. Brorson's mother married the children's home teacher, Oluf Holbek, who was appointed priest. After the stepfather's death in 1721, Hans Adolph Brorson became a priest in Randerup.
5.9 km
North of Hjerpsted there is a fine view of both the Wadden Sea and a group of burial mounds.
The burial mounds are characteristic of the area around Hjerpsted both to the north between Hjerpsted and Kolby and to the south by Ålbæk, where a total of 32 burial mounds have been preserved
6.15 km
Perhaps these Stone Age tombs, which today lie in a damp depression, do not look like much, but in many ways they are unusual. Dozens and other large stone tombs are, as previously mentioned, rare in West Selvig, and at the same time they are a good illustration of the movements that have taken place in the marsh area over the last 5000 years.
When the two long dolmens were built, they lay on a sandy headland facing Brede Å. Later, the gradual land subsidence meant that the area was flooded, but well sometime in the late Bronze Age, an opposite movement set in: the marsh formation, whose clayey deposits again caused the land to rise. When the sea could no longer reach the area, the area was transformed into bog and meadow.
Hidden throughout this course were the two long dolmens, first flooded, then overgrown with clouds and peat to finally reappear in the light again as a result of modern times' embankment and drainage.
6.41 km
6.42 km
Hjerpsted church is probably one of the oldest here in Vestegnen. It should have been built in the 1130s, i.e. around the time of King Erik Ejegod, or just after.
About 40 years after the Reformation in Denmark, the parish was transferred from Ribe Diocese to Schleswig Diocese. Only after the reunification did the parish come under Ribe Diocese again.
6.68 km
The dykes that have been erected over the centuries to protect against the sea and artificial yards on which the old marsh farms are built. There is special nature here as far as the eye can see.
The sworn way
From the road between Hjemsted and the dam, a road leads south - which is called the sworn road.
According to the legend, it is said that Misthusum was in conflict with Skærbæk over the ownership of the road. The case came before the court and it was demanded that the Mist Husum farmers had to stand on the road and swear that they were standing on their own land. They all stuffed soil from their own fields into their pockets and then thought they could safely swear. They were granted the right of way - but they all perished in an unfortunate way and since then you have been able to see them as regulars at night walking on the sworn way. A single man would not swear falsely - and survived.
Misthusum also called the abandoned village
On the meadows of Ballummarsk south of the dam, some elevations can be seen in the landscape - these were the northernmost collections of shipyards. Misthusum was hit by several storm surges and people moved. In 1814 the last family left Misthusum and all that remains is summer poetry, the 8 yards and the Farmer's House.
6.88 km
The Port of Rømø is one of Denmark‘s medium sized ports and a port that is under development. For many years, the main activities have been shrimp fishing and ferry services between Sylt and Rømø.
The Port of Rømø operates with respect for the environment. We are closely linked to the Wadden Sea, which is now a part of the Wadden Sea National Park. The port is environmentally certified and we are working on all levels towards being a clean port.
7.15 km
Come and visit the gallery, where you also can find a workshop with pottery and weaving.
Opening hours during summer
Monday to Sunday 10.00-17.00
Tuesday closed.
During winter by appointment only.