Krambugata
We are now standing in Krambugata, which was the main street of the Middle Ages in Trondheim: Kaupmannastrete. This was the city's most important trading street. It may have functioned as a market square, as no square has been found in medieval Trondheim. Trade took place from open trading booths with a folding flap out onto the street, which served as a counter.
The street was paved with planks, and in the middle, water flowed in a ditch under the paving. This ditch was often blocked, and the dirty drainage water polluted the groundwater, making the well water unsuitable for drinking. On the east side of the street were the largest townhouses. These were located on plots that had been regulated as early as the 900s. Property boundaries remained fixed until the regulation after the great city fire in 1681.
The properties stretched from the street down to the Nidelva River, where the farms ended at a wharf. The farms consisted of several houses. The residential houses were usually three-room parlors and consisted of a vestibule with an entrance door, a living room with a fireplace or smoke oven, and a "cove," which was often used as a bedroom or storage room. In addition, there were loft buildings, storage rooms for goods, and for the animals.
There were also cages, barns, and stables on the small properties, and there could also be separate outhouses.
Some farms also had inns. Trade took place in the city by the riverbank, and trade connections stretched far both from the north, south, and east. The wealthy manors further inland and northward in the fjord brought timber, iron, valuable skins, and bones, which were important commodities. Dried fish was the most important trade item from the north, and luxury goods such as glass, pearls, wine, and other items came from the south through trade routes from the continent. Krambugata retained its medieval course after the city fire in 1681.
Illustration from NTNU Scientific museum Medieval exhibition: Scene from the medieval street
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