A police drug raid in a Stockholm suburb has turned up a suprising find: a valuable painting stolen from one of the city's museums two years ago.

Swedish officers recovered Svartsjukans Natt (Jealousy's Night) by renowned Swedish author August Strindberg after a raid late Thursday, a police spokesperson said.

Various estimates have put the painting's worth at about 10 million Swedish kronor (approximately $1.6 million).

Officials said the painting, which had been snatched during a daylight robbery in central Stockholm in 2006, appeared in good condition. Strindberg Museum director Stefan Bohman was called in to verify the painting's authenticity.

Authorities also arrested two men, suspected of theft or receiving stolen goods, in the raid.

Strindberg, one of Sweden's best known novelists and playwrights best known for Miss Julie and The Red Room, completed the painting in 1893 in Berlin. He died in 1912.

In February 2006, the painting was being featured at the Strindberg Museum in Stockholm when it was removed from its display by one man, while two others distracted museum staffers.

With files from the Associated Press