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UPPSALA

Uppsala: ‘It will make you fall in love with Sweden’

In the The Local’s new series My Sweden, where we profile readers' favourite hangouts, sights, and eateries in their own corners of Sweden, we talk to Harold Martinez, a Venezuelan master’s student in Uppsala, eastern Sweden.

Uppsala: 'It will make you fall in love with Sweden'

Hello! Before you read this, have you checked out The Local's new and revamped #MySweden series? Click here to find out how to take over our Instagram for a week and show the world your Sweden!

The Local: So, a bit of background – who are you and where are you from?

My name is Harold Martinez, I come from beautiful and sunny Venezuela and I am a master's student at Uppsala University.

TL: Is Uppsala worth the 45 minute train ride from Stockholm?

Yes. Uppsala has this feeling of coziness that big cities like Stockholm cannot give, but it’s not so small that you get bored. Also it’s such an important historic place for Sweden. Uppsala was the religious capital of Sweden, the university made Uppsala the centre of knowledge in Sweden, and in the old ages it was an important Viking burial site.

TL: If you had a visitor for just one afternoon, where would you take them to show off the city?

The best place to begin is the Uppsala Cathedral (Domkyrkan). Even if you’re not religious it is so impressive; it’s impossible not to feel the importance of the city when you come from Stockholm by train and see it from far away through the window.

I would take my visitor for a walk beside the Fyris river to see the amazing university, the Anatomic Theater in the Gustavanium Museum and a look to the university's Botanical Garden. And of course, if my visitor is a student, I’d have to show them the lively student scene.

Click here for a walk through Uppsala, spotlighting Harold’s recommendations

And there is a great walk along the river. You begin from the centre and head south, include a warm stop-off at the famous heated bench, feed the ducks in the pond close to the castle, and then walk around the City Park.

TL: Where is your smultronställe? (A place special to your heart)

This is an easy one. Uppsala has a lot of cafés and all of them have their own charm. For me, the one I like the most is Storken. It’s in the center of the city, and if you can manage to find a seat close to a window you can see the Swedes doing their shopping every Saturday afternoon.

They have a great Greek soup for lunch, and if you’re after a Swedish touch, they have lovely cakes, perfect for a very Swedish fika. It’s normally too crowded to enjoy a book, but it’s an excellent place for a good chat with a friend. I even had a job interview there.

TL: Tell me something about Uppsala that the rest of the world doesn't know.

Well, everyone knows about the university, but when I arrived I didn’t know that a lot of important people grew up here or were educated here. Astronomer Anders Celsius, scientist Svante Arrhenius, diplomat Dag Hammarskjöld, and of course the town hero Carl Linnaeus. Not every town in the world has a botanist as a hero.

TL: And finally, where is the best place in town to take in all of Uppsala at once?

The Uppsala Castle – which is incidentally my second smultronställe. It’s practically the only hill in a very flat city, and you can see everything. The church, the botanical gardens, the city, even the local Ikea. And those charming sunsets!

Being in the castle after 10pm to enjoy a beautiful summer sunset is enough to make you fall in love with Sweden.

Interested in sharing your insights about the best places to visit in your area? Send an email to [email protected] and maybe you'll find yourself featured in an upcoming My Sweden installment.

Oliver Gee

Follow Oliver on Twitter here

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UNIVERSITY

Three Swedish universities earn spots in top 100

Three Swedish universities made it into the top 100 in an annual ranking of the world's best schools on Tuesday, but some of the country's higher education seats dropped from last year.

Three Swedish universities earn spots in top 100
Students at Lund University. Photo: Aline Lessner/imagebank.sweden.se

Lund in southern Sweden was again picked as Sweden's top university and came 73rd in the QS World University Rankings, but dropped three ranks on last year (and down from 60 in 2014).

Eight Swedish universities feature in the QS rankings, and all but three fell in the global list.

The ancient Uppsala University climbed back to the top 100, landing a spot in 98th place. Further down the list, Linköping and Umeå Universities both edged up to 282nd and 294th place, up from 286th and 319th, respectively.

The Royal Institute of Technology (Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan, KTH) dropped from 92nd to 97th place. Gothenburg-based Chalmers University of Technology fell from number 132 to 139 (which is still an improvement on its 175th place in the 2014 QS World University Rankings).

Lund was given a five-star ranking in addition to its place in the list. “Lund is Sweden's most attractive study destination. The compact university campus encourages networking and creates the conditions for scientific breakthroughs and innovations,” read the QS description.

“The university has a clear international profile, with partner universities in over 70 countries. Funding of more than 5 billion kronor a year goes to research at eight faculties, which gives Lund one of Sweden's strongest and broadest ranges of research activity.”

THE LOCAL SWITZERLAND: ETH Zurich best in continental Europe

Now in their 13th year, the annual rankings are compiled by global higher education analysts Quacquerelli Symonds (QS), and rank 916 institutions according to four key pillars: research, teaching employability and internationalization.

For the first time in more than a decade US universities took all three top spots, with MIT placing first for the fifth successive year ahead of Stanford and Harvard, knocking Britain's Cambridge to fourth.

Tuesday's list comes less than a month after the Shanghai Rankings, which picked the Karolinska Institute as the best university in Sweden.