A great café with a view of the Nobel Prize Museum and the square in front with interesting people.
The small café has its living room-like rooms in a colorful (orange) building and is located in the famous Seyfridtz House. This was built in the 1520s and came into the possession of Hans Seyfridtz in the 1620s. When he died, his widow Maria Seyfridtz married the owner of the neighboring house, Johan Eberhard Schantz, and thus both houses had the same owners. In the 18th century, the house was renovated and given its current appearance.
The colorful red house next door, on the other hand, has a very special story to tell: To the misfortune of the Swedes, at the end of 1520, the Danish King Christian Tyrann II had 82 noblemen and bishops beheaded here until the square turned blood red. The Swedes remembered the massacre as the Stockholm Bloodbath.