Tureholm is a small and uninhabited artificial river island in Bäveån, which runs through the city of Uddevalla in Bohuslän, Sweden.
[1][2] According to his newspaper Bohusläningen (writing many years after he died), the process of land reclamation took place because Malmgren enjoyed water, and wanted to be closer to the river.
[3] According to another author (who also notes that Malmgren would angle fish from Tureholm, where his "grandiose thoughts had free play"), it partially functioned as a wave breaker, preventing the ice of the late winters from pulling the nearby bridge with it.
[4] A small bridge is said to have formerly led from the mainland to its now overgrown embankments.
[5] Other places named for him include the ruined Tureborg Castle and the nature reserve Ture Valleys.