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Central Bank of Iceland

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Central Bank of Iceland
Central Bank of Iceland
Central Bank of IcelandPhoto: Wikideas1, Wikimedia Commons, CC0. Cropped & resized.

On your left, look for a sober stone-faced block in a low rectangular shape, with the bank’s name set by the main entrance.

A central bank likes to project calm authority... no trumpets, no drawbridge, just the quiet message that serious decisions happen inside. And that instinct is much older than modern finance, which is why strong civic buildings so often borrow the language of fortresses. Here, the Central Bank of Iceland does the same quieter work through money, inflation, and financial stability.

The Normans raised Durham Castle in the eleventh century as part of their push to control the north after the conquest. They chose a hill above the River Wear, which loops around the site on three sides, and they used a motte-and-bailey plan. That means a fortified stronghold on top of a raised mound, with an enclosed yard below for workers, stores, and the everyday machinery of power. Practical, blunt, and very hard to ignore.

The king placed the Bishop of Durham there as a prince-bishop, which meant he ruled with royal authority. So this was not just a home. It was a command post. The great hall still tells that story. Bishop Anthony Bek enlarged it in the early fourteen hundreds, and for a time it ranked as the largest hall of its kind in Britain. Even after Bishop Richard Fox shortened it in the late fifteen hundreds, it remained enormous: about fourteen meters high and more than thirty meters long. That is less living room, more stone megaphone.

Then the place changed character without losing its backbone. In eighteen thirty-seven, people donated the castle to Durham University, and by eighteen forty it reopened as University College. More than one hundred students still live there. The old hall became a dining room, the former basement rooms became student common rooms, and two chapels stayed in use. One Norman chapel dates to about ten seventy-eight, making it the oldest accessible part of the castle. During World War Two, the Royal Air Force even turned it into a command and observation post. Not bad for a chapel.

In nineteen eighty-six, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, UNESCO, named the castle and neighboring cathedral a World Heritage Site.

For the practical note, this is a working bank rather than a sightseeing stop, so admire it from outside and continue when you’re ready. Power changes its costume, but it still loves a strong front. When you’re ready, continue toward Harpa for a very different kind of monument.

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