1807 in Denmark explained
Events from the year 1807 in Denmark.
Incumbents
Events
- 7 January – England declares an embargo against France and its allies, including Denmark-Norway.
- 29 January – The Danish fortress Frederiksnagore surrenders to the British forces and will remain occupied until 1815. Trankebar and the Danish West Indies are also occupied by the British during the conflict.
- 17 April – The Royal Institute for the Deaf is founded in Copenhagen.[2]
- 6 May – Mozart's Don Juan is performed in Copenhagen for the first time, with Édouard Du Puy in the title role.[2]
- 29 August – The Battle of Køge, also known as the 'Clogs Battle', between British troops besieging Copenhagen and Danish militia raised on Zealand ends in British victory.
- 16 August – British troops land at Vedbæk.
- 29–31 August – Battle at Classens Have which is destroyed.[2]
- 2 September – Bombardment of Copenhagen starts: 290 properties burn and another 1,500 to 1,600 are damaged; 2,000 people are killed or wounded; and the Church of Our Lady and the University are among the buildings which burn.[2]
- 7 September – Peymann, the commander of Copenhagen, surrenders to the British after four days of bombardment of the city.
- 21 October – The British sail away with the Danish naval fleet (17 ships of the line, 12 frigates, 8 brigs, 35 smaller vessels and 81 transport ships) after destroying the ships under construction at the Holmen Naval Base.[2]
- 31 October – Denmark-Norway is forced into an alliance with Napoleon.
- 4 November – England declares war on Denmark-Norway.[2]
Undated
- From this year annual art exhibitions are held at Charlottenborg.[2]
- The first step towards the establishment of the museum for Nordic antiquities are made when a small collection is exhibited in the loft above Trinitatis Church in Copenhagen.[2]
Births
Deaths
Notes and References
- Web site: Christian VII Scandinavian king . Encyclopedia Britannica . 1 August 2019 . en.
- Web site: 1807. Selskabet for Københavns Historie. da. 2011-05-24. https://web.archive.org/web/20110719125310/http://kobenhavnshistorie.dk/bog/khsd/1800/1807.html. 19 July 2011. dead.