Special islandsStensholmen - at the grave of Gorch Fock

Christian Tiedt

 · 13.08.2025

View over the military cemetery on Stensholmen.
Photo: Christian Tiedt
A German writer was buried on the inconspicuous skerry Stensholmen. The only way to visit him is across the sea, which he wrote about before he died young in the war.

Stensholmen, one of countless skerries on the Swedish west coast, is only a few hundred metres in diameter, but there is a path that winds up from the beach, which otherwise belongs to the geese, and the shallow anchorage bay in the north-east through rocks and heather until the land falls away again on the other side.

The shadows of the First World War

And there lies the small German military cemetery, bordered by a neat rectangle of quarry stone. There are a dozen or so gravestones here. Most of the dead fell in the Battle of the Skagerrak in May 1916, the largest naval battle of the First World War. Gorch Fock too.

Many people only know this pseudonym of the North German writer - and even then they tend to associate it with a well-known tall ship: the barque "Gorch Fock", training ship of the German Navy. His real name was Johann Kinau and he became famous for his seafaring stories.

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Final resting place on Stensholmen

Born in Finkenwerder in 1880, he died on 31 May 1916 when his ship, the small cruiser "S.M.S. Wiesbaden", was caught between the lines of battle and sank in a hail of steel from the British. Only one man out of almost six hundred survived. The dead poet from the Elbe drifted more than 150 nautical miles through the North Sea to the Väderöarna, the "weather islands"which lie off the Skagerrak archipelago.

He was laid to rest on Stensholmen. A plaque, erected by the crew of the Lübeck steamer "Dora" on 1 July 1920, sends a "homeland greeting" to the fallen. A lonely, beautiful place. With an eternal view of the sea.

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Anchor bay and beach for landing

Stensholmen is located at position: 58º34'33" North, 011º16'28" East in the archipelago belt of the Swedish west coast, south of the town of Fjällbacka in the Bohuslän region. The Skagerrak, which belongs to the North Sea, stretches off the coast. The island covers an area of just 0.16 square kilometres. There is no harbour, but there is a bay in the north-east that is suitable for anchoring and landing with a dinghy.

The Swedish island of Stensholmen in the Skagerrak archipelago.Photo: Christian TiedtThe Swedish island of Stensholmen in the Skagerrak archipelago.

Christian Tiedt

Christian Tiedt

Editor Travel

Christian Tiedt was born in Hamburg in 1975, but grew up in the northern suburbs of the city - except for numerous visits to the harbor, North Sea and Baltic Sea, but without direct access to water sports for a long time. His first adventures then took place on dry land: With the classics from Chichester, Slocum and Co. After completing his vocational training, his studies finally gave him the opportunity (in terms of time) to get active on the water - and to obtain the relevant licenses. First with cruising and then, when he joined BOOTE in 2004, with motorboats of all kinds. In the meantime, Christian has been able to get to know almost all of Europe (and some more distant destinations) on his own keel and prefers to share his adventures and experiences as head of the travel department for YACHT and BOOTE in cruise reports.

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