The Marispelet is a gripping play: The love story about the strong-willed Mari and the poor boy Øystein, in a play acclaimed as one of Norway’s finest.
Rjukan is on the nomination list for UNESCO World Heritage Site. The nomination is based on Rjukans industrial revolution. Read a summary of the nomination background.
The sun mirrors bring sun down to Rjukan Square during winter months, when it is normally shady.
Rikulv lived in the Middle Ages and was outlawed after killing one of the wealthy farmers in a dispute over fishingrights in Lake Mårvatn.
Snowshoe Thompson emigrated to California in 1851, where he accepted a 300 km long postal route over the mountains.
Read the legend about Mari and Øystein, the forbidden love.
During the WWII Vemork in Rjukan was in focus for their production of heavy water. The heavy water war stopped the Germans in developing the atom bomb.
The beautiful, ungovernable Rjukan waterfall had the power, and the engineer, Sam Eyde, and the physicist, Kristian Birkeland, had the know-how.
Visit Hardangervidda National Park Centre with award-winning wild reindeer exhibition and learn about Norway’s largest national park. Great Møsvatn view.