1/4 Milestone of Stockholm
This stone obelisk is a relic of the 17th-century Swedish mile markers.
Since the days of the Roman Empire, stone mile markers were a popular way of both showing the route to a city and marking its borders. In Sweden, these mile markers came into use officially in 1649 thanks of a rising need for travel through the kingdom, to collect taxes among other things.
Stones like this would help workers transporting goods know how far they’d traveled to ensure they got fair compensation. The markers also notified traders that they were within the city limits and had to pay tax on their sold goods.
These stones were marked using the old Swedish mile (the “mil”) which corresponds to about 10 km or 6.2 miles. They remained in use until around 1890, a year after the metric system was introduced in Scandinavia.
The milestones were placed all over Sweden to mark the distance from that spot to the Stockholm Royal Palace, which is still seen as the geographic center of the city. They also denoted distances of 1/4, 1/2, and 3/4 Swedish miles along major roads. One of these 1/4 milestones still stands alongside a major highway in Danderyd outside Stockholm, a stray relic of this early form of measurement.
Know Before You Go
The stone is stationed along the main road. If you take the metro to Danderyd Sjukhus and walk south from there then you can't miss it.
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