lost city found after vanishing in broad daylight 500 years ago
Uncovering a lost Norwegian town, Hamarkaupangen emerges from legend into historical reality through modern archaeology.
The Lost City Was Hidden in Plain Sight
A 16th-Century Chronicle Held the Clue
Many Experts Began to Doubt the Story
Ground-Penetrating Radar Changed the Search
The Radar Found the Town Where the Legend Said
Excavation Revealed Wooden Structures Underground
The First Building Appears to Have Two Rooms
The Discovery May Reveal Streets and Alleys
Hamarkaupangen Was One of Norway’s Medieval Towns
The Legend Is No Longer Just a Legend
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For centuries, the lost medieval town of Hamarkaupangen in Norway existed somewhere between history and legend. Old texts claimed there had once been a settlement east of Hamar’s cathedral and bishop’s castle, but repeated searches failed to uncover convincing physical proof. Over time, the story began to feel less like archaeology and more like folklore — a missing city that might never have existed at all.
Then modern technology changed everything. Archaeologists from the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research and Anno Museum used ground-penetrating radar to scan the area, revealing underground structures exactly where the old chronicles had pointed. Later excavation confirmed wooden remains beneath the surface, turning a 500-year-old clue into one of Norway’s most fascinating medieval discoveries.