Vasa

Vasa may refer to:

Places

  • Vaşa, Azerbaijan
  • Väsa, a village in Dalarna, Sweden
  • Vasa County, a historic county in modern-day Finland
  • Vasa, the Swedish name of the city Vaasa in Finland
  • Vasa Park, New Jersey
  • Vasa Township, Goodhue County, Minnesota
  • Wausa, Nebraska, named after Gustav Vasa, but with a slightly different spelling
  • Vasa Loch, a brackish lagoon in southwestern Shapinsay, Orkney Islands
  • Vasa Kellakiou, Cyprus
  • Vasa Koilaniou, Cyprus
  • Vasa (Rajasthan), a village in Sirohi District, Rajashthan, India
  • Vasa, Palghar, a village in Maharshtra, India
  • Anatomy

  • Vasa nervorum, small arteries that provide blood supply to peripheral nerves
  • Vasa praevia, an obstetric complication
  • Vasa recta, capillaries within the kidneys
  • Vasa recta (intestines), capillaries surrounding the intestines
  • Vasa vasorum, capillaries that supply the outer tissues of large blood vessels
  • Other uses

  • Vasa (name)
  • Vása, the sun in J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional cosmology
  • Vasa IFK, a Finnish football club
  • Vasa parrot, a genus of parrots from Madagascar
  • Vasa (name)

    Vasa is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include:

  • Gustav Vasa (1496–1560), King of Sweden
  • Robert F. Vasa (born 1951), Bishop of Baker
  • Vasa Mihich (born 1933), American artist
  • Vasa Mijić (born 1973), Serbian volleyball player
  • Gustavus Vasa Fox (1821–1883), U.S. Naval officer during the American Civil War
  • House of Vasa

    The House of Vasa (Swedish: Vasaätten, Polish: Wazowie) was an early modern royal house founded in 1523 in Sweden, ruling Sweden 1523–1654, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth 1587–1668 and the Tsardom of Russia 1610–1613 (titular until 1634). Its agnatic line became extinct in Poland with the death of King John II Casimir of Poland in 1672.

    The House of Vasa descended from a Swedish 14th century noble family, tracing agnatic kinship to Nils Kettilsson (Vasa) (died 1378), Vogt of the castle Three Crowns in Stockholm. Several members held high office during the 15th century. In 1523, after the abolisment of the Kalmar Union, Gustav Eriksson (Vasa) became King Gustav I of Sweden and the royal house was founded. His reign is sometimes referred to as the beginning of the modern state of Sweden, along with the foundation of the Protestant Church of Sweden during the Protestant reformation as a result of the King's break with the Roman Catholic Church, usurpring its property on Swedish soil. Yet, his son, King John III of Sweden, married a Catholic Polish Queen Catherine Jagiellon, eventually spreading the House of Vasa to Poland.

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    Vasa: The Ghost Ship

    Bitchute 17 Apr 2025
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