Hafnir
Hafnir | |
---|---|
Town | |
Hafnir | |
Location of the Municipality of Reykjanesbaer | |
Hafnir Location in Iceland | |
Coordinates: 63°56′N 22°41′W / 63.933°N 22.683°WCoordinates: 63°56′N 22°41′W / 63.933°N 22.683°W | |
Country | Iceland |
Constituency[1] | South Constituency |
Region[2] | Southern Peninsula[3] |
Municipality | Reykjanesbær |
Population (2011) | |
• Total | 109 |
Time zone | GMT (UTC+0) |
Website | Official website |
Hafnir is a village in southwestern Iceland.
It is situated in the Reykjanes peninsula and has 109 inhabitants (as of 2011). In 1995 it merged with Njarðvík and Keflavík to form a municipality called Reykjanesbær with a population of 13,971 (January 2011).
A cabin in Hafnir abandoned between 770 and 880 provides the earliest known archaeological evidence of settlement in Iceland.[4]
In 1881, the American ship Jamestown ran aground off Hafnir with no one aboard. Its cargo of timber was salvaged and sold off. The ship's anchor is on display outside the village church.
References
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