Dronningens Enghave Explained

Dronningens Enghave was a seventeenth-century royal pleasure garden located just outside the Western City Gate of Copenhagen, Denmark, roughly where Tivoli Gardens[1] and Copenhagen Central Station[2] lies today.[3]

History

The garden was established by Queen Consort Sophie Amalie after her husband, Frederick III of Denmark, had been crowned in 1648. The garden had pavilions, fishing ponds and rare plants. As late as 1657, 40,000 bricks were used for a house on the premises but it was destroyed by the Swedish troops during their Siege of Copenhagen in the Second Northern War from 1658 to 1660 shortly thereafter. After the war Sophie Amalie established Sophie Amalienborg in its place.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kjøbenhavn under Frederik den Tredie indtil Belejringen.. eremit.dk. 2010-07-14. Danish. 2012-02-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20120229131406/http://www.eremit.dk/ebog/bkh/2/bkh2_1.html. dead.
  2. Web site: A. W. Andersens Sydhavnsprojekt . Kongens Enghave Lokalhistoriske Forening . 2010-07-14. Danish.
  3. Web site: Bryggen - fra strand til kanal. Berlingske Tidende. 7 August 2012. Laura Labarca Clausen. Danish.
  4. Web site: Amalienborg. slottsguiden.info. 2010-07-13. Swedish.