North Cape (Norway)
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The North Cape (Template:Langx; Template:Langx) is a cape on the northern coast of the island of Magerøya in Northern Norway. The cape is in Nordkapp Municipality in Finnmark county, Norway. The European route E69 motorway (highway) has its northern terminus at the North Cape, which makes it the northernmost point in Europe that can be accessed by car and makes the E69 the northernmost public road in Europe. The plateau is a popular tourist attraction. The cape includes a Template:Convert with a large flat plateau on top, where visitors, weather permitting, can watch the midnight sun and views of the Barents Sea to the north. North Cape Hall, a visitor centre, was built in 1988 on the plateau. It includes a café, restaurant, post office, souvenir shop, a small museum, and video cinema.<ref name="snl">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Geography
The steep cliff of the North Cape is located at Template:Coord, about Template:Convert from the North Pole. Nordkapp is often inaccurately referred to as the northernmost point of Europe. However, the neighbouring Knivskjellodden Cape actually extends Template:Convert further north. Furthermore, both of these points are situated on an island (Magerøya), albeit one connected by road to the mainland. The northernmost point of mainland Europe is located at Cape Nordkinn (Template:Lang) which lies about Template:Convert further south and about Template:Convert to the east. That point is located near the village of Mehamn on the Nordkinn Peninsula. The northernmost point of Europe including islands, is hundreds of kilometers further north, either in Russia's Franz Josef Land or Norway's Svalbard archipelago, depending on whether Franz Josef Land is considered to be in Europe or in Asia.
The North Cape is the point where the Norwegian Sea, part of the Atlantic Ocean, meets the Barents Sea, part of the Arctic Ocean. The midnight sun can be seen from 14 May to 31 July. The sun reaches its lowest point between 12:14 am and 12:24 am (00:14 and 00:24) during those days.Template:Citation needed
Transport
The North Cape is reached by European route E69 highway through the North Cape Tunnel, an undersea tunnel connecting the island of Magerøya to the mainland. The EuroVelo bicycle routes EV1, EV7 and EV11 connect the North Cape to Sagres, Portugal,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Malta and Athens, respectively.
Several cruise ships visit the North Cape every year. Honningsvåg is one of the main stops of the Hurtigruten coastal ships.
Regular buses run from the nearby town of Honningsvåg to the North Cape (Template:Convert), and coaches meet the many cruise ships that call at the port of Honningsvåg.
The nearest airport is Honningsvåg Valan Airport (HVG), which offers several flights to and from Tromsø Langnes International Airport (TOS).<ref>https://www.wideroe.no/en Widerøe Airlines, official website</ref>
Winter
It is possible to visit the North Cape during winter, but there is often heavy snow and wind and the last stretch of road is only open for convoys at certain times.Template:CN Before this, E69 was the only winter-closed E-route in Europe.Template:CN
History
The North Cape was named by the Englishman Steven Borough, captain of the Edward Bonaventure, which sailed past in 1553 in search of the Northeast Passage.<ref name="snl" />
Early tourism
The North Cape became a popular tourist destination during the last decades of the nineteenth century, especially after King Oscar II's visit in 1873.<ref name="emt">Template:Cite book</ref> Regular coastal steamer routes from Germany to Northern Norway established in this period facilitated these visits, and Thomas Cook & Son began arranging tours to the destination as early as 1875.<ref name="emt" /> Tourists who climbed the cape would often do so using a path equipped with wired ropes from Hornviken.<ref name="emt" /> They would often celebrate the visit with the writing of postcards, so-called "Cape cards", gazing at the midnight sun.<ref name="emt" />
Monuments and buildings
A granite column was erected commemorating the visit of King Oscar II of Norway and Sweden in 1873 and the visit of German Kaiser Wilhelm II (in 1891) was also marked with a memorial.<ref name="emt" /> In 1891–92, an octagonal wooden building was erected on top of the cape, later named "Stoppenbrinck's" (or "Stoppenbrink's") "Champagne Pavilion".<ref name="emt" />
World War II
In 1943, the Battle of the North Cape was fought in the Arctic Ocean off this cape, where the German battleship Scharnhorst was eventually sunk by gunfire from the British battleship HMS Duke of York and torpedoes from the Norwegian destroyer HNoMS Stord, and other ships of the British Navy.Template:Citation needed
Road access
A road to the North Cape was first built in 1956.<ref name="emt" />
Admission fee courtcase
As of Q3 2022, the justice system has decided that money will not be charged for parking [on the parking lot] at the North Cape; the government has won the case in the appellate court also; the defendant has appealed to the supreme court, as of Q3 2022.<ref>https://e24.no/naeringsliv/i/GMM73J/scandic-anker-parkeringsdom-til-hoeyesterett. Nettavisen.no. Retrieved 2022-10-26</ref> (The courtcase started in 2021.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>John Gustavsen. "Vi venter på dommen" ['we are waiting for the verdict'] Klassekampen. 2022-09-21. P. 32</ref>)
As of 2022, admission to the North Cape visitor centre cost Template:NOK per adult [16 years and older] - and 90 for child between 7-years old and 15-years old.<ref>John Gustavsen. "Vi venter på dommen" ['we are waiting for the verdict'] Klassekampen. 2022-09-21. P. 32. "Men barn mellom sju og 15 år må ut med 90 kroner."</ref><ref name=Demands>Template:Cite news</ref> Often there is fog (since the plateau is above the common cloud base), which obscures the view. There is no discount for this situation, but the full price ticket is valid for multiple entries within 24<ref>http://www.visitnordkapp.net/en/opening-hours. Visitnordkapp.net Retrieved 2022-10-15</ref> hours.
In 2000, and again in 2011, the Norwegian Ministry of the Environment responded to pressure from interest groups and asked Nordkapps VEL, the company that maintains the site, to reduce the admission fee to the plateau.<ref name=Demands/> Nordkapps VEL responded that the 8,000 daily visitors and distant location places great demands on the operations, maintenance, and security of the facilities and natural features of the large site.<ref name=Demands/> Visitors arriving by foot, bicycle, or other non-motorized vehicles are nowadays offered free entrance.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Sport and leisure
The 2009 Trans Europe Foot Race started in Bari, Italy and finished at North Cape. The total distance was Template:Convert.
The NorthCape4000 is a bicycle race that finishes at the North Cape. The total distance is around Template:Convert.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The first stage of the 2014 Arctic Race of Norway was held on the North Cape on 14 August 2014. The bicycle race started in Hammerfest, finishing on the North Cape and was won by Norwegian, Lars Petter Nordhaug for Template:UCI team code in a time of 4 hours 51 minutes 3 seconds.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Norge På Langs is a Template:Convert classic ski route, which stretches from Lindesnes, the most southerly tip of Norway to Nordkapp in the far north. The record of cycling this distance is 4 days, 22 hours, and 18 minutes which was performed by a group of five men from Rye in Oslo, in July 2003.<ref>Ny sykkelrekord</ref>
The E1 European long distance path begins in the North Cape and extends for 7,114 km south to the Mediterranean Sea.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
References
External links
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