A brief glimpse into the past

Highlights: Dalkurd FF - Hammarby TFF 3-0
Highlights: Dalkurd FF - Hammarby TFF 3-0

Highlights från match i tolfte omgången av Ettan Norra mellan Dalkurd FF och Hammarby TFF. // Highlights from the twelvth round ...



IF Karlstad Fotboll-Hammarby TFF Hammarby anländer



IF Karlstad Fotboll mot Hammarby TFF



Hammarby TFF - Gefle IF (3-3) | Höjdpunkter
Hammarby TFF - Gefle IF (3-3) | Höjdpunkter

Hammarby TFF - Gefle IF (3-3) | Höjdpunkter 2022-10-01.



Team, Place & City Details

Hammarby Fotboll

Hammarby Fotboll, commonly known as Hammarby IF or simply Hammarby , is a Swedish football club based at Tele2 Arena in Johanneshov but founded in the neighbouring Södermalm district of Stockholm City Centre, an area the club considers its heartland. Competing in Sweden's first tier, Allsvenskan, Hammarby are placed twelfth in the all-time Allsvenskan table, and won the league in 2001.

Hammarby Fotboll (ladies)

Hammarby Fotboll Dam is a women's association football team from Stockholm that currently competes in the Swedish top-tier league Damallsvenskan. The team is affiliated with the club Hammarby Fotboll.

Hammarby Talang FF

Hammarby Talang FF was a Swedish football club that acted as the development team for Hammarby IF.

Örebro Syrianska IF

Örebro Syrianska IF is a Swedish football club from Örebro.

Saint Nicholas Church, Örebro
Saint Nicholas Church, Örebro

The Saint Nicholas Church or the Nicholas Church (Swedish: Nikolaikyrkan) is a church building in central Örebro, Sweden. It was originally called the Örebro Church (Swedish: Örebro kyrka) because it was the only Church of Sweden building in town until the early 20th century.

Örebro Synod

The Örebro Synod took place at Candlemas in Örebro in Sweden in 1529. It was the first Synod in Sweden since the introduction of the Protestant Swedish Reformation in 1527, and regarded as the theological completion of the Reformation, following the economic policy of the Reformation introduced at the Reduction of Gustav I of Sweden in 1527.