Klockeflogen - water pound that comes with an old story along the Jälmåleden
The story says that here was a church bell immersed. The story are still "embroidering" on the saying that it could be worn on a Thursday night under absolute silence. It is told that once the watch was at the edge of a boat, then there was one of the participants who cried out in his eagerness: "Now we have it!" Then the clock disappeared into the water again and you have not been able to find it since.
It may be a part of the oral tradition, but the truth is probably another.
The clock was cast in 1523. It probably meant that it cost a lot of money to the boys, and it was worth it.
In 1527 Gustav Vasa announced the so-called " The clock debt, when a clock in each of the churches of the country was to be collected and melted down, this to pay the country's debt to the lübeck. The socks in Nittorp did not want to release their new clock. It was then lowered it in the vault, where none of the king's knights could find it. When the dangers were over, the clock was picked up. It is today in Nittorp's church.
It may be a part of the oral tradition, but the truth is probably another.
The clock was cast in 1523. It probably meant that it cost a lot of money to the boys, and it was worth it.
In 1527 Gustav Vasa announced the so-called " The clock debt, when a clock in each of the churches of the country was to be collected and melted down, this to pay the country's debt to the lübeck. The socks in Nittorp did not want to release their new clock. It was then lowered it in the vault, where none of the king's knights could find it. When the dangers were over, the clock was picked up. It is today in Nittorp's church.
Part of the story about the clock debt in Nittorp
The king's economies of excellence went out over the country's churches. The "superfluous possessions" of the Church were to pay the expensive post-clearance accounts for the release from the Danish empire. The ore of the watches were sought after means of payment. Otherwise, perhaps one of those who lowered Nittorp's church bell in the "Clock Cliff" at Backalund when the king's messenger came to retrieve it. Perhaps his father, unknown to us, was one of the customers of the fine ore watch. Indeed, it was guessed 1523 of the still unknown name of the clover as a late researcher named "The Nittorps Castor". If the saying about the church bell is true then the precious bell was eventually picked up. It is now in the tower of Nittorp's present church, built in 1847 in another place in the parish. The cliff lay still 400 years later in its place about 1 km from the old church square. It was my best-known and safe skating rink in the 1930s, but is now largely a deep cavity as a result of the groundwater cuts. (Ref. Junhall: Some Pioneers, Priests and Dannemen in Kindz, Mo and Redwägz, 1993)
Saxat from http://www.kindsforskarklubb.se/kindsforskaren/2003-1.pdf
Saxat from http://www.kindsforskarklubb.se/kindsforskaren/2003-1.pdf