Södra Benickebrinken
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Södra Benickebrinken
Södra/Norra Benickebrinken are two sloping streets in Gamla stan, in the old town in central Stockholm, Sweden, stretching from Österlånggatan up to Svartmangatan. Etymology The present name is derived from a ''Jören Benick'', a man who had a tavern here named ''Solen'' ("The Sun") after the sign hanging in the street. The tavern was located in a block demolished at the end of the 19th century and located on the eastern side of the then extremely narrow slopes. It was later taken over by Jören's grandsons, both mentioned as the city's official innkeepers in the beginning of the 17th century. The slopes were originally named ''Svartbrödrabrinken'' and ''Svartmunkabrinken'' ("Black Brother's/Monk's Slope") after the Black Friars' Monastery located on the western side of the southern slope until the Protestant Reformation, Reformation (1520–1530). The monastery was built on land given to the Dominican Order, Dominicans following the coronation of King Magnus IV of Sweden, M ...
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