Visitors from the Norwegian town of Flekkefjord in Norway were special guests at Burntisland Highland Games.
The games provided the finale to an exchange trip involving schoolchildren and dignitaries from Norway.
This year marks 70 years of twinning between the two towns.
A group of teenagers have been staying with local youngsters while they discovered Scotland’s cultural highlights.
And Flekkefjord’s mayor Jan Sigbjornsen flew in for a weekend of celebrations including a ceilidh and folk night.
Burntisland councillor George Kay said: “It’s been a wonderful week so far.
“The young people have been here since July 12 and have been around Scotland.
“The mayor’s party arrived on Friday and have had a wonderful weekend.
“We’ve just had a fantastic time and the culmination is the games today.”
Next year, young people from Burntisland will travel to Flekkefjord.
Mr Sigbjornsen said: “We’ve been having a great time here in Burntisland.
“I’m glad that we’ve been able to again take up a youth exchange, and keep up the friendship.
“Flekkefjord and Burntisland are quite similar. We are a coastal city and much of our past is about sailing and whatever the sea brings.”
Founded in 1946, the twinning agreement is one of the oldest in the UK.
Links between the towns were formed during the second world war, when Norwegian soldiers were based in Fife.
When the idea of twinning was first mooted after the war, it was local children who suggested there should be a relationship with somewhere in Norway.
Flekkefjord is located in the south of Norway and has a population of around 9,000 compared to Burntisland’s population of 6,000.
In the past, both towns were dependent on herring fishing and shipbuilding.
For the 50th twinning anniversary in 1996, around 150 Norwegian visitors from Flekkefjord travelled to Burntisland and a commemorative cairn was established on the Links.