An Audio Tour of Visby

1 hour to 1 hour 30 minutes (approximately)
Offered in: English and 1 more

Visby's medieval centre is so well preserved that UNESCO granted it World Heritage status in 1995. On this walking tour, you'll trace how Visby rose from a Viking-age trading post to become the Baltic's most powerful Hanseatic city, and how Danish invasions, the Black Death, and the Reformation brought that golden age to an end.
Starting at the Port Terminal, you'll pass through the Southern Gate where archaeologists found medieval arrowheads in the stonework, explore a park that was once the Baltic's busiest harbour, and walk above a 4,000-year-old Stone Age settlement buried beneath the cobblestones. Along the way you'll hear of a woman imprisoned on witchcraft charges, stand inside a Dominican church burned in 1525, and discover why the famous Goddess of Abundance statue was actually a French mail-order sculpture.

What's Included

Lifetime access to this tour in English before your booking date and after it
Offline access to audio, maps, and geodata
Flexibility to explore at your own pace with a self-guided GPS tour
App for Android and iOS
Directions to the starting point so that when you’re in the right place, the tour will start
Smartphone and headphones

Meeting and pickup

Meeting point

This tour starts at Port Terminal. Before arrival, please install the mobile app and use the code provided on your confirmation ticket. Detailed starting point instructions are available after downloading.

End point

Tour ends along the harbour

Itinerary

Duration: 1 hour to 1 hour 30 minutes (approximately)
  • (Pass by)

    Stroll away from the Destination Gotland port terminal and get your bearings at the edge of one of the Baltic's best-preserved medieval cities, its UNESCO-listed rooftops and church ruins visible from the water's edge. Discover how Visby grew from a Viking-age trading post into the most powerful Hanseatic city in the Baltic, and how a series of invasions, plagues, and reformations brought that golden age to a close.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Pass Josefinakällan, a historic freshwater spring near the city wall that once provided a vital water source for Visby's inhabitants and visiting merchants. Learn how access to fresh water shaped the layout of the medieval town and supported the dense commercial activity that made Visby the Baltic's most coveted trading hub.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Marvel at the Visby Town Wall, one of the best-preserved medieval ring walls in Europe, stretching nearly four kilometres around the old town with 27 surviving towers. Explore how this formidable fortification — begun in the 13th century and expanded over decades — tells the story of a city wealthy enough to build it and vulnerable enough to need it.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Walk through Söderport, the Southern Gate, where merchants once paid customs duties on goods entering the city and archaeologists later uncovered medieval arrowheads still embedded in the stonework. Examine the gate's cross-vaulted interior, where a faint medieval sculpted double-face survives in one corner — a quiet witness to centuries of trade, conflict, and passage.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Explore Sankta Maria Cathedral, the only medieval church in Visby to survive the Reformation intact, its towers dominating the old town skyline as they have since the 12th century. Discover how this German merchant church outlasted the ruins of sixteen other medieval churches that once stood within the city walls, a testament to Visby's extraordinary and turbulent past.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Stroll down S:t Lars gränd, one of Visby's characterful medieval lanes, where the scale and texture of the 13th-century streetscape survive almost unchanged. Learn how the dense network of alleys and plots in this part of the old town reflects the commercial logic of a Hanseatic city at the height of its power, when every square metre of space within the walls was fiercely contested.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Walk through Almedalen, the serene park at the heart of the old town that was once the busiest harbour in the entire Baltic Sea, where merchants from across northern Europe loaded and unloaded their cargo. Discover how this quiet green space transformed over centuries from a medieval commercial waterfront into the site of Sweden's most influential annual political gathering.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Stand inside the dramatic ruin of St. Nicolai, the Dominican convent church burned by Lübeck's forces in 1525 during the final collapse of Visby's Hanseatic power. Marvel at how the roofless nave and surviving arches create one of the most atmospheric spaces in the city, now used as an open-air concert venue each summer.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Pass the Goddess of Abundance statue at Packhusplan, long attributed to a local artist but later revealed to be a French mail-order sculpture — one of many identical castings distributed across Europe in the 19th century. Discover how this small revelation captures something essential about Visby's later history, a city that had fallen quiet enough to mistake an imported ornament for a local landmark.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Stroll through Donners Plats, Visby's historic market square, where the rhythms of daily trade continued long after the Hanseatic golden age had faded. Explore how this open square connects the layers of the city's history — from medieval commerce to the quiet harbour town that Visby became — before ending at the Old Residence, built in 1647 for Gotland's first Swedish governor.

    Admission ticket free

Additional info

  • Service animals allowed
  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
Supplied by VoiceMap Audio Tours

Tags

Private and Luxury
Private Sightseeing Tours
Audio Guides
Cultural Tours
Historical Tours
Walking Tours

Cancellation Policy

For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.

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