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Church of Our Lady, Copenhagen

The Church of Our Lady (Danish: Vor Frue Kirke) is the cathedral of Copenhagen. It is situated on the Frue Plads public square in central Copenhagen, next to the historic main building of the University of Copenhagen.[1]

Church of Our Lady
Vor Frue Kirke
LocationCopenhagen
CountryDenmark
DenominationChurch of Denmark
Previous denominationRoman Catholicism
Websitekoebenhavnsdomkirke.dk
History
StatusCathedral & Parish church
Founded1187
Founder(s)Absalon
DedicationVirgin Mary
Consecrated7 June 1829
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Architect(s)Christian Frederik Hansen
StyleNeo-Classicism
Years built1817–1829
Groundbreaking1 November 1817
Completed1829; 194 years ago (1829)
Specifications
Capacity1184 seats
Length86 m (282 ft 2 in)
Width33 m (108 ft 3 in)
Nave width16 m (52 ft 6 in)
Number of towers1
Tower height58 m (190 ft 3 in)
Bells4
Administration
DioceseCopenhagen
ParishVor Frue
Clergy
Bishop(s)Peter Skov-Jakobsen
ProvostJohannes Gregers Jensen
Priest(s)Steffen Ringgaard Andresen
Eva-Maria Schwarz
Stine Munch
Signe Malene Berg
Christian Monrad
Laity
Organist(s)Hanne Kuhlmann

The present-day version of the church was designed by the architect Christian Frederik Hansen (1756–1845) in the Neoclassical style and was completed in 1829.[2]

History Edit

Construction of the original Collegiate Church of St. Mary (den hellige Marias kirke) began no later than 1187 under archbishop Absalon (c. 1128–1201). The church was located on the highest point near the new town of Havn, later Copenhagen. Absalon was the bishop of Roskilde (Zealand), Denmark's capital of that era, and spent most of his life securing Denmark from foreign attacks. He built many churches and monasteries, while also founding Copenhagen as Denmark's Baltic port city. Named archbishop of Lund in 1178, Absalon accepted only under threat of excommunication. St. Mary's construction continued sporadically until 1209, when it was consecrated by Absalon's successor, bishop Peder Sunesen [Wikidata] (c. 1161–1214) on Annunciation Sunday in March, which became the church's traditional feast day. The church was built in Romanesque style with its half-rounded arches inside and out.[3][4]

In 1314, a fire destroyed the limestone church so completely that it was rebuilt in the popular new building material of the day, oversized red brick. The style of building was Gothic, with its typical pointed arches. The rebuilding of the simple church with a long nave and choir continued until 1388. Due to a lack of money, the great tower was not built until the reign of king Christian II. It was as high as the church was long, and from artwork of the day, out of proportion to the size of the church.[5]

A school was established early on. In 1479, parts of the church school received a charter and become the University of Copenhagen. Professors were brought from Cologne, Germany. The international faculty widened Denmark's exposure to the great ideas and philosophies of the day. The university challenged the growth of the Protestant movement, but was eventually closed. By 1537 it reopened as a centre for Lutheran studies.[6]

 
The rebuilt cathedral in the 18th century

The Protestant Reformation was hard on St. Mary's. Citizens of Copenhagen had elected to follow Luther, but Roman Catholic officials at St Mary's tried to maintain the church as a centre of Catholic resistance to change in Copenhagen. By royal decree both Roman Catholic and Lutheran priests were commanded to use the church jointly, which incensed the majority of Copenhagen's population. On 27 December 1530 hundreds of citizens stormed St. Mary's, destroying every statue and dismantling the choir stalls. The 17 richly gilt altars were stripped of jewels and gold and smashed, as were reliquaries, vestments and altar equipment. Even the name "St. Mary's" became Our Lady's Church (Vor Frue Kirke), keeping the historic reference to the Virgin Mary without the use of the un-Lutheran "Saint" appellation.[6]

Just a year later Our Lady Church celebrated the acceptance of the Lutheran order of worship presided over by Johannes Bugenhagen (1485–1558), an associate of Martin Luther. 1539 saw the installation of the first Lutheran superintendents, later bishops, of Denmark. In 1568 the dean of Our Lady Church was charged with defining accepted practice for Lutheran church services in Denmark under the direction of the Bishop of Zealand. Ever since, the dean (and later bishop) of Our Lady Church has carried out that role in the Danish National Church.[6]

 
The spire of the Church of Our Lady on fire in 1807, as painted by Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg. To the left of the church: the Round Tower and the Trinitatis complex.

Lightning strikes damaged the church in 1573 and 1585, and some of the vaulting, tower, and roof collapsed after the resulting fires. The tower was eventually demolished, but rebuilt by 1609. It had an extremely tall pyramidal central spire with four shorter spires at each corner.[7]

The medieval proto-cathedral was completely destroyed by a four-day-long conflagration in October 1728 which destroyed a third of the city. All the many chapels and eighty epitaphs commemorating some of Denmark's most prominent nobles and wealthy parishioners vanished. A decade later, the church was reconstructed, essentially on the same plan as the medieval church, in red brick with a simple long nave and rounded choir added at the end and ornate sandstone doorways beneath the spire. The interior combined Gothic and with the ornate Baroque style of the time. Ranks of tall half-round windows let in natural light, and ribbed brick vaulting arched high overhead from two long rows of squared pillars supporting the roof. A row of side chapels ringed the nave and choir giving the appearance of a five-aisled church which impressed all who entered, including King Christian VI who oversaw the building's progress with impatience. Friederich Ehbisch (1672–1748) carved a magnificent new altarpiece and pulpit in the finest Baroque tradition. The best-preserved ancient gravestones from the floor of the old church were replaced in the floor, although not in the same locations.[8]

After the 1728 fire, the new tower rose, higher than the previous one tapering to a tall spire modeled after the spire of St. Martin in the Fields in London. The bells from the former St. Nikolai Church (Sankt Nikolaj Kirke) were moved to the new spire in 1743 and a set of four new bells were cast and added. The largest bell, "The King's Bell", weighed just over 6000 kg. Eventually, the tower held 42 bells. It was popular at the time to pay for extra ringing after weddings and funerals, which was a source of complaint by university students who were trying to study. A smaller tower in the same style was added to the roofline above the choir.[6]

In September 1807, the cathedral was destroyed during the bombardment of Copenhagen by the British Royal Navy under Admiral James Gambier during the Napoleonic Wars. The British demanded the surrender of the Dano-Norwegian fleet and the city. The Danes refused, but with most of the army on the Schleswig-Holstein border, the city was nearly defenseless. For three days the fleet bombarded the city and coastal forts. Royal Navy gunners used the tower of church for range practice, setting it ablaze, which in turn burned the church to the ground, along with nearby sections of Copenhagen. Copenhagen surrendered and the fleet was turned over to the British.[9]

 
Christus in the Church of Our Lady, Copenhagen, by Bertel Thorvaldsen

Denmark's finest architect, Christian Frederik Hansen, and the city magistrate redesigned the cathedral in the Neo-Classical style. Due to a lack of resources they incorporated elements of the surviving walls. The old surviving vaulting was blown up to make way for a church built in the new style. A pillared portico and a flat interior ceiling and simple classical lines are very different from the medieval church. The cornerstone was laid in 1817 and the work completed by Whitsun Day 1829. Bertel Thorvaldsen (1770–1844) was commissioned to decorate the interior with statues of Jesus Christ and the apostles; Judas Iscariot replaced by St. Paul. Other artists also contributed sculptures and paintings. Thorvaldsen carved and donated the modern font as a personal gift.[10]

The tower, based on the older medieval tower, became a controversial afterthought. The Neo-Classical style did not include towers, but citizens demanded and got a tower modeled on the older medieval tower. The tower is 60 meters high and contains four bells. "Stormklokken", cast in 1828 by Soren Hornhaver, is the heaviest bell in Denmark at 4 tons. The oldest bell in Denmark also hangs there cast in 1490 by Olug Kegge. It was transferred to Our Lady Church from Antvorskov Kloster. A third bell was cast in 1699 by Friderich Holtzmann. The fourth cast by Anker Heegaard in 1876.[6]

Our Lady Church was designated a Denmark's National Cathedral only in 1924. Its relatively recent cathedral status stems from the splitting of Zealand (Sjaelland) into two Lutheran dioceses in 1922.[6]

Major renovation organized by Professor Vilhelm Wohlert (1920–2007) in 1977–79 removed various additions that had accrued in the interior of the church over the years. Marcussen & Søn built a new large central organ in 1995, with a choir organ added in 2002. The crypt has been converted into a museum which contains models of the various iterations of the building.[11]

Architecture Edit

 
Statues by Bertel Thorvaldsen depicting Jesus Christ and his Apostles

The building measures 83 m in length and 33 m in width. The interior of the nave is 60 m long and over 25 m from floor to ceiling. With all galleries open, the church can seat more than 1100 people. The tower is 60 m high and houses the four church bells. Stormklokken weighs 4 tons and is the largest bell in Denmark. The smallest bell in the tower is used at morning service among other occasions. It is the oldest bell in the country, dating from 1490 and taken from the former Antvorskov Kloster in Slagelse. [12]

The pediment is decorated with bronzes of Jesus Christ and the Apostles. The interior is likewise decorated with the twelve apostles (one in front of each of the piers of the central nave), the Risen Christ displaying the wounds in his body (in a niche above the altar) and in front of the altar the baptismal font in the form of an angel holding a large scallop shell, all in Italian carrara marble. All of these sculptures were completed in Rome by the famous Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen. In the aisles, a bronze bust of Bertel Thorvaldsen, modeled by Herman Wilhelm Bissen (1798–1868) is on display along with many portraits of bishops and deans. [13]

Royal events in the church Edit

Burials Edit

Burials in the church or former churchyard include:

  • Cort Adeler (1622–1675), naval officer
  • Caspar Bartholin (1558–1628), physician and theologian
  • Thomas Bartholin (1616–1680), physician, mathematician and theologian
  • Thomas Bartholin (1659–1690), historian
  • Henrik Bornemann (1646–1710), clergyman and theologian
  • Hans Brochmand (1594–1638), theologian and rector
  • Jesper Brochmand (1585–1652), clergyman and theologian
  • Poul Egede (1708–1789), theologian, linguist and missionary
  • Thomas Fincke (1561–1656), mathematician and physicist
  • Christian Foss (1626–1680), physician and Supreme Court justice
  • Jens Foss (1629–1687), physician and councillor
  • Matthias Foss (1627–1683), physician
  • Christian Friis (1556–1616), statesman and landowner
  • Johan Friis (1494–1570), statesman and landowner
  • Johan Ludvig Holstein (1694–1763), statesman
  • Christian Horrebow (1718–1776), astronomer
  • Anders Krag (1553–1600), physicist, physician and rector
  • Poul Madsen (1527–1590), clergyman
  • Jacob Madsen Aarhus (538–1586), theologian and rector
  • Árni Magnússon (1663–1730), scholar and collector
  • Peder Palladius (1503–1560), clergyman and reformer
  • Hans Hansen Resen (1596–1653), theologian and clergyman
  • Hans Poulsen Resen (1561–1638), theologian and clergyman
  • Christen Friis Rottbøll (1727–1797), physician and botanist
  • Ole Rømer (1644–1710), astronomer[14]
  • Laurids Mortensen Scavenius (1589–1655), clergyman
  • Peder Lauridsen Scavenius (1623–1685), jurist, civil servant, rector and landowner
  • Gerhard Schøning (1722–1780), historian, writer and rector
  • Johan Peter Suhr (1712–1785), merchant
  • Jørgen Vind (1593–1644), statesman
  • Christen Worm (1672–1737), theologian
  • Ole Worm (1588–1654), physician, natural scientist, antiquarian and collector
  • Marcus Wøldike (1699–1750), theologian

Broadcast services Edit

Each morning (except Sundays), between 8.05 and 8.25 local time, Danish public radio (DR) transmits a live act of worship from the cathedral, recordings of which can also be heard via the internet.[15]

Gallery Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Vor Frue Kirke". Nationalmuseet. from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  2. ^ "Hansen, Christian Frederik, 1756–1845, Arkitekt". Dansk biografisk Lexikon. from the original on 29 December 2017. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  3. ^ "Absalon". Den Store Danske, Gyldendal. from the original on 26 August 2018. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  4. ^ "Sunesen, Peder, o.1161–1214, Biskop". Dansk biografisk Lexikon. from the original on 29 December 2017. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  5. ^ Susanne Torgard. "Kirkens historie". domkirken.dk. from the original on 2 September 2018. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Vor Frue Kirke / Københavns Domkirke". kirkehistorie.dk. from the original on 23 September 2017. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  7. ^ "Bugenhagen, Johann (1485–1558)". Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 1 September 2018.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "Friedrich Ehbisch". Dansk Biografisk Leksikon. from the original on 2 September 2018. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  9. ^ "Gambier, James, Baron Gambier (1756–1833)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/10321. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. from the original on 2 September 2018. Retrieved 1 September 2018. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  10. ^ "Bertel Thorvaldsen". Kunstindeks Danmark. from the original on 2 September 2018. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  11. ^ "Vilhelm Wohlert". Den Store Danske, Gyldendal. from the original on 2 September 2018. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  12. ^ "Antvorskov Kloster". Salmonsens konversationsleksikon. from the original on 3 September 2018. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  13. ^ "Herman Vilhelm Bissen". Den Store Danske, Gyldendal. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  14. ^ "Roemer, Ole Christensen". Galileo Project. from the original on 15 April 2017. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  15. ^ Morgenandagten 7 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine (dr.dk/radio)

External links Edit

  • Official website (in Danish)
  • Vor Frue Kirke Nasjonalmuseet (in Danish)
  • Copenhagen's Cathedral Discover Denmark & Copenhagen
  • Source

55°40′46″N 12°34′22″E / 55.67944°N 12.57278°E / 55.67944; 12.57278

church, lady, copenhagen, church, lady, danish, frue, kirke, cathedral, copenhagen, situated, frue, plads, public, square, central, copenhagen, next, historic, main, building, university, copenhagen, church, ladyvor, frue, kirkelocationcopenhagencountrydenmark. The Church of Our Lady Danish Vor Frue Kirke is the cathedral of Copenhagen It is situated on the Frue Plads public square in central Copenhagen next to the historic main building of the University of Copenhagen 1 Church of Our LadyVor Frue KirkeLocationCopenhagenCountryDenmarkDenominationChurch of DenmarkPrevious denominationRoman CatholicismWebsitekoebenhavnsdomkirke wbr dkHistoryStatusCathedral amp Parish churchFounded1187Founder s AbsalonDedicationVirgin MaryConsecrated7 June 1829ArchitectureFunctional statusActiveArchitect s Christian Frederik HansenStyleNeo ClassicismYears built1817 1829Groundbreaking1 November 1817Completed1829 194 years ago 1829 SpecificationsCapacity1184 seatsLength86 m 282 ft 2 in Width33 m 108 ft 3 in Nave width16 m 52 ft 6 in Number of towers1Tower height58 m 190 ft 3 in Bells4AdministrationDioceseCopenhagenParishVor FrueClergyBishop s Peter Skov JakobsenProvostJohannes Gregers JensenPriest s Steffen Ringgaard AndresenEva Maria SchwarzStine MunchSigne Malene BergChristian MonradLaityOrganist s Hanne KuhlmannThe present day version of the church was designed by the architect Christian Frederik Hansen 1756 1845 in the Neoclassical style and was completed in 1829 2 Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 3 Royal events in the church 4 Burials 5 Broadcast services 6 Gallery 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditConstruction of the original Collegiate Church of St Mary den hellige Marias kirke began no later than 1187 under archbishop Absalon c 1128 1201 The church was located on the highest point near the new town of Havn later Copenhagen Absalon was the bishop of Roskilde Zealand Denmark s capital of that era and spent most of his life securing Denmark from foreign attacks He built many churches and monasteries while also founding Copenhagen as Denmark s Baltic port city Named archbishop of Lund in 1178 Absalon accepted only under threat of excommunication St Mary s construction continued sporadically until 1209 when it was consecrated by Absalon s successor bishop Peder Sunesen Wikidata c 1161 1214 on Annunciation Sunday in March which became the church s traditional feast day The church was built in Romanesque style with its half rounded arches inside and out 3 4 In 1314 a fire destroyed the limestone church so completely that it was rebuilt in the popular new building material of the day oversized red brick The style of building was Gothic with its typical pointed arches The rebuilding of the simple church with a long nave and choir continued until 1388 Due to a lack of money the great tower was not built until the reign of king Christian II It was as high as the church was long and from artwork of the day out of proportion to the size of the church 5 A school was established early on In 1479 parts of the church school received a charter and become the University of Copenhagen Professors were brought from Cologne Germany The international faculty widened Denmark s exposure to the great ideas and philosophies of the day The university challenged the growth of the Protestant movement but was eventually closed By 1537 it reopened as a centre for Lutheran studies 6 nbsp The rebuilt cathedral in the 18th centuryThe Protestant Reformation was hard on St Mary s Citizens of Copenhagen had elected to follow Luther but Roman Catholic officials at St Mary s tried to maintain the church as a centre of Catholic resistance to change in Copenhagen By royal decree both Roman Catholic and Lutheran priests were commanded to use the church jointly which incensed the majority of Copenhagen s population On 27 December 1530 hundreds of citizens stormed St Mary s destroying every statue and dismantling the choir stalls The 17 richly gilt altars were stripped of jewels and gold and smashed as were reliquaries vestments and altar equipment Even the name St Mary s became Our Lady s Church Vor Frue Kirke keeping the historic reference to the Virgin Mary without the use of the un Lutheran Saint appellation 6 Just a year later Our Lady Church celebrated the acceptance of the Lutheran order of worship presided over by Johannes Bugenhagen 1485 1558 an associate of Martin Luther 1539 saw the installation of the first Lutheran superintendents later bishops of Denmark In 1568 the dean of Our Lady Church was charged with defining accepted practice for Lutheran church services in Denmark under the direction of the Bishop of Zealand Ever since the dean and later bishop of Our Lady Church has carried out that role in the Danish National Church 6 nbsp The spire of the Church of Our Lady on fire in 1807 as painted by Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg To the left of the church the Round Tower and the Trinitatis complex Lightning strikes damaged the church in 1573 and 1585 and some of the vaulting tower and roof collapsed after the resulting fires The tower was eventually demolished but rebuilt by 1609 It had an extremely tall pyramidal central spire with four shorter spires at each corner 7 The medieval proto cathedral was completely destroyed by a four day long conflagration in October 1728 which destroyed a third of the city All the many chapels and eighty epitaphs commemorating some of Denmark s most prominent nobles and wealthy parishioners vanished A decade later the church was reconstructed essentially on the same plan as the medieval church in red brick with a simple long nave and rounded choir added at the end and ornate sandstone doorways beneath the spire The interior combined Gothic and with the ornate Baroque style of the time Ranks of tall half round windows let in natural light and ribbed brick vaulting arched high overhead from two long rows of squared pillars supporting the roof A row of side chapels ringed the nave and choir giving the appearance of a five aisled church which impressed all who entered including King Christian VI who oversaw the building s progress with impatience Friederich Ehbisch 1672 1748 carved a magnificent new altarpiece and pulpit in the finest Baroque tradition The best preserved ancient gravestones from the floor of the old church were replaced in the floor although not in the same locations 8 After the 1728 fire the new tower rose higher than the previous one tapering to a tall spire modeled after the spire of St Martin in the Fields in London The bells from the former St Nikolai Church Sankt Nikolaj Kirke were moved to the new spire in 1743 and a set of four new bells were cast and added The largest bell The King s Bell weighed just over 6000 kg Eventually the tower held 42 bells It was popular at the time to pay for extra ringing after weddings and funerals which was a source of complaint by university students who were trying to study A smaller tower in the same style was added to the roofline above the choir 6 In September 1807 the cathedral was destroyed during the bombardment of Copenhagen by the British Royal Navy under Admiral James Gambier during the Napoleonic Wars The British demanded the surrender of the Dano Norwegian fleet and the city The Danes refused but with most of the army on the Schleswig Holstein border the city was nearly defenseless For three days the fleet bombarded the city and coastal forts Royal Navy gunners used the tower of church for range practice setting it ablaze which in turn burned the church to the ground along with nearby sections of Copenhagen Copenhagen surrendered and the fleet was turned over to the British 9 nbsp Christus in the Church of Our Lady Copenhagen by Bertel ThorvaldsenDenmark s finest architect Christian Frederik Hansen and the city magistrate redesigned the cathedral in the Neo Classical style Due to a lack of resources they incorporated elements of the surviving walls The old surviving vaulting was blown up to make way for a church built in the new style A pillared portico and a flat interior ceiling and simple classical lines are very different from the medieval church The cornerstone was laid in 1817 and the work completed by Whitsun Day 1829 Bertel Thorvaldsen 1770 1844 was commissioned to decorate the interior with statues of Jesus Christ and the apostles Judas Iscariot replaced by St Paul Other artists also contributed sculptures and paintings Thorvaldsen carved and donated the modern font as a personal gift 10 The tower based on the older medieval tower became a controversial afterthought The Neo Classical style did not include towers but citizens demanded and got a tower modeled on the older medieval tower The tower is 60 meters high and contains four bells Stormklokken cast in 1828 by Soren Hornhaver is the heaviest bell in Denmark at 4 tons The oldest bell in Denmark also hangs there cast in 1490 by Olug Kegge It was transferred to Our Lady Church from Antvorskov Kloster A third bell was cast in 1699 by Friderich Holtzmann The fourth cast by Anker Heegaard in 1876 6 Our Lady Church was designated a Denmark s National Cathedral only in 1924 Its relatively recent cathedral status stems from the splitting of Zealand Sjaelland into two Lutheran dioceses in 1922 6 Major renovation organized by Professor Vilhelm Wohlert 1920 2007 in 1977 79 removed various additions that had accrued in the interior of the church over the years Marcussen amp Son built a new large central organ in 1995 with a choir organ added in 2002 The crypt has been converted into a museum which contains models of the various iterations of the building 11 Architecture Edit nbsp Statues by Bertel Thorvaldsen depicting Jesus Christ and his ApostlesThe building measures 83 m in length and 33 m in width The interior of the nave is 60 m long and over 25 m from floor to ceiling With all galleries open the church can seat more than 1100 people The tower is 60 m high and houses the four church bells Stormklokken weighs 4 tons and is the largest bell in Denmark The smallest bell in the tower is used at morning service among other occasions It is the oldest bell in the country dating from 1490 and taken from the former Antvorskov Kloster in Slagelse 12 The pediment is decorated with bronzes of Jesus Christ and the Apostles The interior is likewise decorated with the twelve apostles one in front of each of the piers of the central nave the Risen Christ displaying the wounds in his body in a niche above the altar and in front of the altar the baptismal font in the form of an angel holding a large scallop shell all in Italian carrara marble All of these sculptures were completed in Rome by the famous Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen In the aisles a bronze bust of Bertel Thorvaldsen modeled by Herman Wilhelm Bissen 1798 1868 is on display along with many portraits of bishops and deans 13 Royal events in the church Edit1363 Wedding of Margaret I of Denmark and King Hakon VI of Norway 28 October 1449 Coronation and marriage of King Christian I of Denmark and Queen Dorothea of Brandenburg 1536 Coronation of King Christian III of Denmark 1559 Coronation of King Frederick II of Denmark 17 August 1596 Coronation of King Christian IV of Denmark 1648 Coronation of King Frederick III of Denmark 14 May 2004 Wedding of Frederik Crown Prince of Denmark and Mary Elizabeth DonaldsonBurials EditBurials in the church or former churchyard include Cort Adeler 1622 1675 naval officer Caspar Bartholin 1558 1628 physician and theologian Thomas Bartholin 1616 1680 physician mathematician and theologian Thomas Bartholin 1659 1690 historian Henrik Bornemann 1646 1710 clergyman and theologian Hans Brochmand 1594 1638 theologian and rector Jesper Brochmand 1585 1652 clergyman and theologian Poul Egede 1708 1789 theologian linguist and missionary Thomas Fincke 1561 1656 mathematician and physicist Christian Foss 1626 1680 physician and Supreme Court justice Jens Foss 1629 1687 physician and councillor Matthias Foss 1627 1683 physician Christian Friis 1556 1616 statesman and landowner Johan Friis 1494 1570 statesman and landowner Johan Ludvig Holstein 1694 1763 statesman Christian Horrebow 1718 1776 astronomer Anders Krag 1553 1600 physicist physician and rector Poul Madsen 1527 1590 clergyman Jacob Madsen Aarhus 538 1586 theologian and rector Arni Magnusson 1663 1730 scholar and collector Peder Palladius 1503 1560 clergyman and reformer Hans Hansen Resen 1596 1653 theologian and clergyman Hans Poulsen Resen 1561 1638 theologian and clergyman Christen Friis Rottboll 1727 1797 physician and botanist Ole Romer 1644 1710 astronomer 14 Laurids Mortensen Scavenius 1589 1655 clergyman Peder Lauridsen Scavenius 1623 1685 jurist civil servant rector and landowner Gerhard Schoning 1722 1780 historian writer and rector Johan Peter Suhr 1712 1785 merchant Jorgen Vind 1593 1644 statesman Christen Worm 1672 1737 theologian Ole Worm 1588 1654 physician natural scientist antiquarian and collector Marcus Woldike 1699 1750 theologianBroadcast services EditEach morning except Sundays between 8 05 and 8 25 local time Danish public radio DR transmits a live act of worship from the cathedral recordings of which can also be heard via the internet 15 Gallery Edit nbsp Baptismal font by Thorvaldsen nbsp Ceiling nbsp Altar nbsp Organ nbsp Interior nbsp Pulpit nbsp Moses statue by Herman Wilhelm BissenReferences Edit Vor Frue Kirke Nationalmuseet Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Hansen Christian Frederik 1756 1845 Arkitekt Dansk biografisk Lexikon Archived from the original on 29 December 2017 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Absalon Den Store Danske Gyldendal Archived from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Sunesen Peder o 1161 1214 Biskop Dansk biografisk Lexikon Archived from the original on 29 December 2017 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Susanne Torgard Kirkens historie domkirken dk Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 a b c d e f Vor Frue Kirke Kobenhavns Domkirke kirkehistorie dk Archived from the original on 23 September 2017 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Bugenhagen Johann 1485 1558 Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online Retrieved 1 September 2018 permanent dead link Friedrich Ehbisch Dansk Biografisk Leksikon Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Gambier James Baron Gambier 1756 1833 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 10321 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Subscription or UK public library membership required Bertel Thorvaldsen Kunstindeks Danmark Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Vilhelm Wohlert Den Store Danske Gyldendal Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Antvorskov Kloster Salmonsens konversationsleksikon Archived from the original on 3 September 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Herman Vilhelm Bissen Den Store Danske Gyldendal Retrieved 1 September 2018 Roemer Ole Christensen Galileo Project Archived from the original on 15 April 2017 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Morgenandagten Archived 7 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine dr dk radio External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vor Frue Kirke Kobenhavn Official website in Danish Vor Frue Kirke Nasjonalmuseet in Danish Copenhagen s Cathedral Discover Denmark amp Copenhagen Source55 40 46 N 12 34 22 E 55 67944 N 12 57278 E 55 67944 12 57278 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Church of Our Lady Copenhagen amp oldid 1172832083, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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