LånkeLånke est un village et une ancienne commune norvégienne. Lånke comptait habitants en 2001 dont plus de la moitié dans le centre de l'ancienne commune : la localité de Hell. Lånke fait désormais partie de la commune de Stjørdal, Comté de Nord-Trøndelag. La commune fut créée en 1902 lorsque le district du Bas-Stjørdal fut divisé en trois communes : Lånke, Skatval et Stjørdal. Le , les communes de Lånke, Skatval, Stjørdal et Hegra sont fusionnées pour devenir la seule commune de Stjørdal. Catégorie:Ancienne c
ThamshavnThamshavn or Thamshamn is a small port village in the municipality of Orkland in Trøndelag county, Norway. It is the site of the port for the town of Orkanger and the ferrosilicon plant Elkem Thamshavn. It is located right along European route E39 and is the Thamshavn Station was the terminus of the Thamshavnbanen railway. Thamshavn came into being in 1867 when the local farmer Wilhelm Thams established a sawmill on the area that was named after him.
Heim (former municipality)Heim is a former municipality in the old Sør-Trøndelag county in Norway. The municipality existed from 1911 until its dissolution in 1964. The municipality encompassed the northern part of what is now Heim and Orkland municipalities and the southeastern part of Hitra municipality in Trøndelag county. The administrative centre was the village of Heim where Heim Church is located. Originally (since 1838) the municipality was a part of the municipality of Hemne (see formannskapsdistrikt law).
ØysandØysand is a small village in the northwestern part of the municipality of Melhus in Trøndelag county, Norway. The village sits on the south side of the mouth of the Gaula River, at the head of the Gaulosen, an arm off the main Trondheim Fjord. The Øysand area measures about . The Gaula River borders Øysand to the north and east, separating it from Leinstrand in the municipality of Trondheim. To the west there is a shallow sandy beach on the shore of Gaulosen, a branch of Trondheim Fjord.
Bataille de StiklestadLa bataille de Stiklestad (Stiklarstaðir en vieux norrois), l'une des batailles les plus célèbres de l'histoire de Norvège, prit place le . Elle est l'une des étapes du processus de christianisation de la Norvège puisqu'elle opposa le sud chrétien, mené par Olaf II de Norvège au nord païen. Olaf y trouva la mort, ce qui lui valut plus tard de devenir un saint. Dès le début de son règne, Olaf II avait entrepris de convertir, parfois de force, son peuple au christianisme. Ceci bien sûr n'alla pas sans heurts.