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| Next to Magnus-katedralurin (left of picture) and Ólavskirkjan (right) stands Kirkjubøargarður ("yard of Kirkjubøur" in Faroese), the country's oldest still-inhabited wooden house, notable in a land without trees. The old farmhouse dates back to the 11th century, originally the episcopal seminary for the Diocese of the Faroe Islands, reverting to Crown land after the Reformation. |
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