
Island Life
Town life, cultural heritage and creative force
Come closer to life on Bornholm
Island life on Bornholm begins by the sea, but it does not stop at the coast. It continues into the towns, up the cliffs, through the small streets and into the workshops where hands shape glass, clay, wood and stone.
Here, harbours, round churches, smokehouses, mills and old quarries lie close together. Each place has its own rhythm. In some places, there is the scent of smoke and salt water. In others, church bells, tools against material or the wind around a mill sail set the mood.
This is where you come closer to the real Bornholm, in small encounters with Bornholm life, cultural heritage and creative force in the middle of the Baltic Sea.

A good place to live is a good place to visit
Our towns and fishing villages are, first and foremost, settings for living Bornholm life. They are places where everyday life is lived all year round, and where we love the way the island’s pulse changes with the seasons.
We are proud of our small local communities, with their own rhythms, strong sense of community and each their own way of welcoming you to Bornholm.
As you explore along the coast and inland across the island, you quickly sense the differences. Each town has its own pulse, its own history and its own mood. You can feel the historic soul in the old streets, experience the entrepreneurial spirit by the harbours or find calm in the smaller fishing villages.
Explore Bornholm’s towns and find the place where you feel most at home.
Where figs ripen in the Baltic Sea
Bornholm is known as the Sunshine Island, and the climate is something special. The Baltic Sea gives the island a cooler spring, while the cliffs and the sea hold on to the warmth for longer. That is why late summer and autumn can feel mild, while the light still stands clear over cliffs, gardens and coastal towns.
The mild climate is one of the reasons why figs and mulberry trees can thrive on Bornholm. A small sign that the island’s location in the middle of the Baltic Sea does something to nature, the seasons and life here.
Creative force shaped by hand
On Bornholm, creative force is not just something you look at from a distance. It is found in the workshops, in the materials and in the meeting with people who work with their hands every day.
Glass, ceramics, textiles, wood, jewellery and metal are shaped all across the island. In some places, you can follow the work up close. In others, you meet the finished piece in small shops, galleries, museums and exhibitions. Every year, artists and craft makers open their doors even wider during Kunstrunden and Bornholm Craft Weeks.
Bornholm has been named a World Craft Region, and you can feel it in the island’s strong craft scene. Here, new ideas build on traditions, materials and the special calm that many artists and craft makers find on the island.
When you step into a Bornholm workshop, you come closer to another side of the real Bornholm. Here, the island’s light, cliffs, clay, sea and history are transformed into something you can see, touch and take home with you.
The white gold beneath Rønne
Bornholm’s ceramic tradition does not only begin in the hands of skilled ceramicists. It also begins in the ground beneath the island.
Around Rønne, there is kaolin, a fine white clay that was excavated for many years and used for porcelain, fireproof products and ceramics, among other things. This raw material helped lay the foundation for Bornholm’s ceramic factory history and for places like Hjorths Fabrik, where the craft still lives on.
Today, you can experience traces of the kaolin extraction at Kaolinsøen in Rønne. A quiet nature spot with a raw-material history beneath the surface.
Culture and community all year round
Island life on Bornholm is also about everything that brings people together in everyday life. Libraries, sports halls, swimming pools, theatre, concerts, associations and local events help give the island life, even when the bustle of summer has settled.
Here, Bornholmers meet across ages, interests and seasons. At a performance, a concert, a handball match, a morning swim, a reading group or a local festival. Some experiences are small and close to everyday life. Others bring the whole island together or draw visitors from far away.
For you as a visitor, the cultural life is a way into the real Bornholm. Not only as something you can watch, but as something you can step into for a while. Here, you feel the island as a living place with communities, energy and people who create something together all year round.
Culture in a bigger weight class
Bornholm has a population the size of a smaller Danish provincial town, yet the island offers cultural experiences that reach far beyond its size.
In Rønne, you find Denmark’s oldest functioning theatre, established in 1823, where theatre, music and performing arts are still presented all year round. Just a few steps away is Musikhuzet, Bornholm’s regional music venue, which since 1996 has brought the island together around concerts, new talent and well-known names from the Danish music scene.
That is part of what makes Bornholm’s cultural life special: small settings can hold great experiences.
The sea as a lifeline
On Bornholm, the sea is never far away. It lies around the island like a frame, but also like a lifeline. For generations, the sea has provided work, food on the table and a connection to the rest of the world.
You can still feel it in the harbours, in the old fishing villages and in the smokehouse history, where herring, smoke and craftsmanship became part of Bornholm’s taste and identity. The smokehouses tell of a time when the catch from the sea was prepared close to the quay and sent out into the world.
It is part of a larger story about an island that learned to use its own resources. The sea and the fish. The clay beneath Rønne. The granite on North Bornholm. The rich soil in the fields. What was found here became industry, craft, food culture and everyday life.
The sea still sets its mood on the island. In the arrival of the ferry, in the fishing boats by the quay, in the wind over the cliffs and in the quiet mornings when the harbour wakes before the town. It creates distance, but also connection: to the world beyond, to the Baltic Sea and to generations of people who have always had the waves as their nearest neighbour.

When the sea was the island’s largest workplace
In the 1980s, fishing was Bornholm’s largest industry. The harbours hummed with cutters, filleting factories, export and everyday life, and cod from the Baltic Sea in particular helped create jobs and put Bornholm on the map as a fishing island.
Today, Bornholm’s commercial fishing has come to an end, while anglers still head for the coasts all year round. The traces of fishing’s heyday live on in the harbours, fishing villages and smokehouses. Here, you can still taste and feel the history of the time when the sea was the island’s great workplace.
Island life on Ertholmene
Northeast of Bornholm lie Ertholmene, with Christiansø and Frederiksø as small communities in the middle of the Baltic Sea. An island community entirely its own. Here, distances are short, the sea is close on all sides, and the day is shaped by wind, weather and the arrival of the ferry.
Christiansø was built as a fortress, and you can still feel it in the walls, the yellow buildings and the narrow paths between the houses. Here, history does not only belong to the past. It is part of the life still lived on the islands.
Walk across the bridge to Frederiksø, follow the paths along the fortress walls and take time to notice the details. The cliffs, the view, the birdlife and the small traces of everyday life make the visit something special.
On Ertholmene, you come close to a unique local community where nature, history and everyday life lie right beside each other.
School days between cannons
Although only around 90 people live on Christiansø, the island has its own school. Here, the island’s children go to school until 7th grade, with break times quite literally between historic fortress walls and cannons.
Cultural heritage stands in the landscape
On Bornholm, history is not only found behind glass in a museum. It stands in the middle of the landscape, where you can meet it on your way around the island.
In the four round churches, the Middle Ages, faith and defence meet in one and the same building. At the old mills, you feel the connection to agriculture, wind and everyday life. And in the quarries around Vang and Hammeren, you can see the traces of the granite that, over time, shaped both the island and the people who lived from it.
Cultural heritage is part of the real Bornholm. It is found in the cliffs, churches, mills, harbours and old buildings. And often, you only have to stop for a moment to notice it.
The granite that travelled beyond the island
Look more closely the next time you walk through Copenhagen. The raw nature of North Bornholm has left traces far from the island.
When the granite adventure in Vang Granitbrud and on Hammeren took off in the 19th and 20th centuries, Bornholm stonemasons cut the rock from the cliffs and sent the granite onwards across the sea.
Today, you can meet Bornholm granite at Christiansborg, among other places, where Moseløkke granite from Bornholm has been used on Slotspladsen. So the next time you stand in the middle of the capital, you may be standing with a small piece of Bornholm beneath your feet.
History lies right beneath your feet
Bornholm has been inhabited for thousands of years, and the island’s history appears in many places directly in the landscape. Not as one complete story, but as traces you can find when you walk through forests, along cliffs or between old stone dikes.
At Madsebakke near Allinge, you can see rock carvings from the Bronze Age cut directly into the rock. Ships, sun crosses, footprints and small cup marks tell of people who looked towards the sun, the sea and the unknown long before Bornholm had its towns and churches.
Elsewhere, standing stones rise as silent memorials. At Gryet near Nexø, they stand between the trees in an old burial ground, where the Bronze Age and Iron Age meet in stone, burial mounds and quiet forest floor. Here, you feel how far back the roots of Bornholm life reach.
If you want to dive deeper into the island’s history, there are also museums that unfold the stories. At Bornholms Museum, you can come closer to the island’s long history. At Bornholms Forsvarsmuseum in Rønne, the focus is on war, defence and Bornholm’s strategic position in the Baltic Sea. And at Melstedgård near Gudhjem, you step into life on a Bornholm farm, where agriculture, craft and everyday life belong together.
Later, the Viking Age and the Middle Ages left new traces in runestones, churches, castle ruins and old harbour connections. And in more recent times, Bornholm was once again marked by world history, when the Second World War and the Soviet period left deep traces, especially in Rønne and Nexø.
History on Bornholm is not hidden away. It lies in the rock, in the ground, in the walls and in the places you can visit today.
When the clock kept ticking on Bornholm
While the rest of Denmark celebrated liberation in May 1945, the war was not over on Bornholm. On 7 and 8 May, Rønne and Nexø were bombed by Soviet aircraft after the German commander refused to surrender to the Soviet Union.
A few days later, Soviet soldiers landed on the island. The Soviet presence lasted until 5 April 1946, almost a year after the liberation of the rest of Denmark.
At several of the island’s museums, you can learn more about this special chapter of Danish history, which still holds a place in Bornholm’s sense of itself.
Experience island life all year round
Bornholm changes character with the seasons. In summer, the towns, harbours and coasts hum with life. But the island also has another side, which becomes clearer when the high season loosens its grip.
In early spring, you feel the light return over cliffs, forests and small streets. In the mild autumn, the sea, gardens and smokehouses take on a quieter glow. And in winter, nature stands more raw and open, with wind over the coast, quiet harbours and plenty of space for reflection.
This is when Bornholm can feel closest of all. When everyday life is allowed to fill the space, and you meet the island at the pace we live in ourselves. On a walk through a town, in a workshop, at a museum, along a cliff path or over a cup of coffee while the weather changes outside.
Island life on Bornholm is town life, cultural heritage and creative force. But it is also the magic of the seasons, the small encounters and the feeling of coming closer to the real Bornholm. All year round.

The island’s own voice
Bornholmian is the only East Danish dialect still spoken in Denmark. To international visitors, it may sound almost like a small language of its own, but to many Bornholmers it is part of everyday life, identity and belonging.
In Bornholmian, ikke (“not”) can become ønte, køkken (“kitchen”) can become tjøkken, gæs (“geese”) can become djæss and ild (“fire”) can become illj. Small words and sounds that show how Bornholm has kept its own voice in the middle of the Baltic Sea.












