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The Great Snow Battle of Laiuse, Feb 2006
Re-enactment of a snow battle fought more than 300 years ago on the same spot



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IMG_0343 Part of the remaining wall of the Laiuse Castle IMG_0356 The -20 degrees celsius temperature is no joke, if it has to be endured for a few hours in a row. IMG_0359 Lining up the defences. IMG_0366 The attackers come to greet the defenders. IMG_0369 IMG_0370 IMG_0384 The arrival of the king is announced. IMG_0408 The king arrives. IMG_0392 IMG_0396 IMG_0406 IMG_0414 IMG_0422 IMG_0427 The young ladies of the king's entourge checking out the young king. IMG_0432 The young ladies get into a fight over which one of them the king favours more. IMG_0474 Let the battle begin! IMG_0475 IMG_0485 The first wave of attackers are forced to retreat. IMG_0495 An attacker is pouring the wall onto the defenders trying to hide behind it. IMG_0496
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Comments:

Event - The Great Snow Battle of Laiuse ("Laiuse Lumelahing"). Apparently the King of Sweden Karl XII ordered his troops to stage a huge snowfight when he and his army stayed at the Laiuse castle during the winter of 1701. The King of Sweden was in the middle of waging war against Russia at the time, but a brief recess in the war allowed him to try out some new strategies he had thought of whilst also allowing his soldiers to have some fun in the process. In honour of this rather curious historical event - a massive and coordinated snowfight involving a whole army - the Laiuse Snow Battle now takes place in the very same spot (in the midst of the ruins of the former Laiuse castle) more than 300 years later.

Photography - At first I thought I'd be the modern photo-journalist with my 55-200mm Sigma zoom lens, covering the event from a safe distance. I couldn't resist the temptation though. It was a gamble to go into the middle of a huge snowbattle with a completely unprotected camera, but there's no denying that a true frontline photographer covers a battle from the trenches. It was rather hopeless to try and frame a shot while trying not to get shot myself, so I had to shoot mostly blind. It was comforting to see that not even the 12mm of my new 12-24 F4 Tokina super wide angle lens was not wide enough at times. Too bad I forgot to take the circular polarizer with me - the sky in the pictures is consequently completely dull, white and gray.