WORLDEUROPENORWAYSTANGE

is a municipality in the county of Hedmark, Norway. Situated on the east side of the lake Mjøsa, it borders the municipalities of Hamar on the north, Løten, Våler, and Åsnes to the east, Nord-Odal to the south and Eidsvoll to the west.

The name

The municipality (originally the parish) is named after the old farm Stange (Norse Stangir), since the first church was built here. The name is the plural form of stong f 'bar, pole, rod'. (The farm is lying on a long hill, and this is probably the background for the name.)

Coat-of-arms

The coat-of-arms is from modern times (1986). It shows an ard (scratch-plough).

Geography

Stange consists of several areas that were previously distinct, including Vallset, Romedal, Espa, Åsbygda, Tangen, and Stange itself. The municipality can be roughly divided into two areas: the northern area, with rich and fertile agricultural land; and a southern area with craggy, forested area (the Stange Commons). As a result, the northern section is dominated by large, prosperous farms; the southern part by small, marginal farms.
history.
History

Archeological finds indicate agricultural settlements in the area well before the Viking era. Since the shortest route from the south to Hamar went through the area, there have also been trade and hospitality there since time immemorial. Stange has its own historical association that publishes articles, short research topics, as well as authoritative works on the area's history.
Stange church lies in Stange. It is one of the oldest Norwegian churches. It is mentioned in 1225 im Håkon Håkonsens saga.


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