Excerpts from the
Wikipedia summary:
Vädersolstavlan (Swedish for "The Sun Dog Painting") is an oil-on-panel painting depicting a halo display, an atmospheric optical phenomenon, observed over Stockholm on April 20, 1535.
It is named after the sun dogs (Swedish: Vädersol, "Weather sun")
appearing on the upper right part of the painting. While chiefly noted
for being the oldest depiction of Stockholm in colour, it is arguably
also the oldest Swedish landscape painting and the oldest depiction of
sun dogs...
The medieval urban conglomeration, today part of the old town Gamla
stan, is rendered using a bird's-eye view. The stone and brick buildings
are densely packed below the church and castle, which are rendered in a
descriptive perspective (i.e., their size relates to their social
status, rather than their actual dimensions). Scattered wooden
structures appear on the surrounding rural ridges, today part of central
Stockholm...
According to the passage in the Vasa Chronicle, however, both
Petri and the master of the mint Anders Hansson were sincerely troubled
by the appearance of these sun dogs. Petri interpreted the signs over Stockholm as a warning from God
and had the Vädersolstavlan painting produced and hung in front of his
congregation. Notwithstanding this devotion, he was far from certain on
how to interpret these signs and in a sermon delivered in late summer
1535, he explained there are two kinds of omens: one produced by the
Devil to allure mankind away from God, and another produced by God to
attract mankind away from the Devil — one being hopelessly difficult to
tell from the other. He therefore saw it as his duty to warn both
his congregation, mostly composed of German burghers united by their
conspiracy against the king, and the king himself...
In the painting, the actual sun is the yellow ball in the upper-right corner surrounded by the second circle. The large circle taking up most of the sky is a parhelic circle, parallel to the horizon and located at the same altitude as the sun, as the painting renders it...
There's way more at the extensive
Wikipedia page on old Stockholm and the science of the phenomenon
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