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Trandum Forest: Norway's Secret Execution Site
Trandumskogen Memorial Site. A short drive from Oslo Airport, Trandum Forest appears unremarkable at first glance. During the occupation, however, it became one of the most notorious execution sites in Norway. Between 1941 and 1945, the German security police carried out secret executions here, targeting resistance members, Soviet prisoners of war and Allied personnel.
After liberation, investigators uncovered mass graves containing nearly 200 victims. Today, the forest is quiet and carefully maintained as a memorial, a stark contrast to the events that took place among the trees.
Telavåg: The Village That Was Wiped Out
In April 1942, two German Gestapo officers were killed during an operation in the fishing village of Telavåg. The response was swift and brutal. Nazi authorities ordered the destruction of the entire community.
Every house was burned. The men were deported to concentration camps, while women and children were removed from the village and interned elsewhere in Norway.
Few places illustrate the realities of collective punishment more clearly. Telavåg became Norway's equivalent of Lidice in Czechoslovakia—a community deliberately destroyed to intimidate others.
The Blood Road of Northern Norway
Blodveien Memorial. One of the least discussed wartime tragedies in Norway took place during the construction of roads and railway infrastructure in the north. Thousands of Soviet, Yugoslav and Serbian prisoners were forced into hard labour under appalling conditions. The route became known as Blodveien, the Blood Road.
Many prisoners died from starvation, disease, exposure and execution. Today, travellers crossing Nordland often pass through areas where these events unfolded, unaware of the suffering that helped shape the region's wartime history.
Beisfjord: A Forgotten Camp
Beisfjord Prison Camp Memorial. Near Narvik stood one of the harshest prison camps in occupied Norway. In 1942, hundreds of Yugoslav prisoners were killed in what became known as the Beisfjord massacre.
Although the camp played a significant role in the history of Nazi atrocities in Norway, it remains little known outside the country. Yet the events at Beisfjord rank among the worst war crimes committed on Norwegian soil.
Kirkenes: The Town Beneath the Bombs
Andersgrotta. Kirkenes experienced more than 300 air raids during the war, making it one of the most heavily bombed places in Europe relative to its size.
For local residents, survival often meant taking shelter underground. Andersgrotta, a large shelter blasted into the bedrock beneath the town, became a refuge during repeated attacks.
Walking through the tunnels today provides a rare insight into the daily reality faced by civilians living on the front line of the war in northern Norway.
The Forgotten Fortresses of the Atlantic Wall
Thousands of German bunkers, gun positions, tunnels and observation posts still line the Norwegian coast. Some have become museums, but many remain abandoned and largely unnoticed, hidden in forests, perched on isolated islands or slowly disappearing beneath sand and vegetation.
These fortifications formed part of Hitler's Atlantic Wall, one of the largest defensive construction projects of the war. Their scale reflects the strategic importance Germany placed on Norway and its coastline. More than eighty years later, many structures remain remarkably intact.
Jan Baalsrud's Arctic Escape
The story of Jan Baalsrud is widely known through the book and film The 12th Man, but the locations connected to his escape are often overlooked.
After the failure of Operation Martin in 1943, Baalsrud became the sole survivor of his sabotage team. For more than two months he evaded German forces across the mountains and fjords of northern Norway.
Sheltering in snow caves, enduring severe frostbite and relying on the help of local people, he crossed some of the harshest terrain in Europe before eventually reaching safety in Sweden. His journey remains one of the most remarkable survival stories of the Second World War.
These sites tell a different story from the better-known chapters of Norway's wartime history. They are places of occupation, survival, punishment and resistance, often far from the battlefields that dominate popular memory.
What makes these places fascinating is not merely their military significance. They reveal the human side of the war: ordinary villagers punished for resistance, prisoners forced into impossible labor, civilians surviving beneath mountains of rock, and individuals risking everything to help strangers.
Many remain quiet and largely unchanged. That is part of their power. In a forest near Oslo, a rebuilt fishing village on the west coast, or an abandoned bunker overlooking the sea, the war can feel surprisingly close. Together, these places serve as reminders that some of history's most important stories are found not in famous landmarks, but in locations that have slipped from public attention.
Stein Morten Lund, June 2026