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Danish National Archives

The Danish National Archives (Danish: Rigsarkivet) is the national archive system of Denmark. Its primary purpose is to collect, preserve and archive historically valuable records from central authorities, such as ministries, agencies and national organisations and make them available to the public. The archive is part of the Ministry of Culture.

Danish National Archives
Danish: Rigsarkivet
Logo of the Danish National Archives
Agency overview
Formed1889 (1889)
Preceding agencies
  • Gehejmearkivet (1296–1883)
  • Kongerigets Arkiv (1861–1884)
  • Statens Arkiver ( –2014)
JurisdictionGovernment of Denmark
HeadquartersCopenhagen, Denmark
Employees250[1]
Agency executives
  • Karl Hansen, National archivist
  • Ole Magnus Mølbak Andersen, Vice-director
  • Kirsten Valladsen Kristmar, Vice-director[2]
Parent departmentThe Ministry of Culture
Websiteen.rigsarkivet.dk

Previously the term Danish State Archives (Danish: Statens Arkiver) was used as the collective name for the archive system. In 2014 the archives were reorganised, and the name Rigsarkivet (which had previously only applied to the Danish National Archives in Copenhagen) became the new collective name for the entire archive system.

History edit

In the early Middle ages, the majority of records keep by Danish monarchs were packed into chests which accompanied them on their travels around the kingdom. The first evidence of permanent government archives comes from the 14th century, when an archive was established at Vordingborg Castle. Soon after, Queen Margaret I established an archive at Kalundborg Castle (Danish: Kalundborg Slot). As Copenhagen had become the seat of the crown, King Christopher III established an administrative archive at Copenhagen Castle, and in 1582 all of the Royal Archives (Danish: kongerigets arkiv) were gathered in the vault at Copenhagen Castle. By 1684, the Royal Archives had been relocated to the newly constructed Rosenborg Castle.[3]

In 1720, the Royal Archives were again relocated near the former chancery building, to be housed at the same location as the Gehejmearkivet (lit.'secret archive' or 'confidential archive').[3][4] In 1883, the two archival institutions were overseen by the same director, and in 1889 they were officially merged by law. The resulting merger formed the National Archives (Danish: Rigsarkivet).[3][4] The same law which established the National Archives also called for the formation of several provincial archives, which would be responsible for the curation of local administrative documents within the same archival system.[3]

In the 20th century two independent archives were established in Denmark: the Data Archives (Danish: Dansk Data Arkiv) and the National Business Archives (Danish: Erhvervsarkivet). The business archives were established in 1948 in Aarhus as an independent institution. It was acquired by the state in 1962.[5] The data archives were established in 1973; it was initially located in Copenhagen, but relocated to Odense in 1978 when it became part of Odense University.[6]

Danish State Archives edit

The archival law of 1992 restructured the national archival system, so that the entire system was overseen by the Danish State Archives.[3] Initially, the term Danish State Archives referred collectively to these archives:

  • Danish National Archives (Copenhagen)
  • Danish Data Archives (Odense)
  • Danish National Business Archives (Aarhus)
  • Provincial Archives of Zealand, Lolland-Falster and Bornholm (Copenhagen)
  • Provincial Archives of Southern Jutland (Aabenraa)
  • Provincial Archives of Funen (Odense)
  • Provincial Archives of Northern Jutland (Viborg)

The four provincial archives held records transferred from regional authorities, like courts of law, the county authorities, the police and many other local authorities. Records from central authorities, such as ministries, agencies and national organisations, were held at the Danish National Archives. The Danish National Business Archives kept registers, documents, etc. from companies and organisations in the business sector. The Danish Data Archives, the newest of the seven archive holding bodies, kept historical and social science studies such as registers, databases and other electronically stored information.

In 2012, the Provincial Archives of Zealand, Lolland-Falster and Bornholm were disestablished and its collections were merged with the Danish National Archives in Copenhagen.

Current structure edit

In 2014, the State Archives were again restructured; the entire organization was centralized under one name and governing body. On 1 October 2014, the name Danish State Archives (Danish: Statens Arkiver) was replaced with the name Danish National Archives (Danish: Rigsarkivet).[7][3] Today the name Danish National Archives refers to all archives within the national system, not just the organization's headquarters in Copenhagen. Under the new structure, the separate archives became reading rooms in a larger archive system. The new Danish National Archives were initially organised as:

  • Danish National Archives, Copenhagen (formerly the Danish National Archives in Copenhagen)
  • Danish National Archives, Aarhus (formerly the Danish National Business Archives)
  • Danish National Archives, Aabenraa (formerly the Provincial Archives of Southern Jutland)
  • Danish National Archives, Odense (formerly the Provincial Archives of Funen)
  • Danish National Archives, Viborg (formerly the Provincial Archives of Northern Jutland)

Reading Rooms edit

Today, the Danish National Archives includes four reading rooms: the National Archives in Copenhagen, Aabenraa, Odense, and Viborg. Until 2015, the archives also had a reading room in Aarhus; its collections have since been moved to Viborg.[8]

Danish National Archives, Copenhagen edit

 
The reading room at the national archive in Copenhagen, 2013.

The archive was founded in 1889 out of two older national archives, Gehejmearkivet (1296–1883) and Kongerigets arkiv (1861–1884). In 2012 the collections of the Provincial Archives of Zealand, Lolland-Falster and Bornholm were merged into the Danish National Archives. In 2014, the Danish National Archives was renamed Danish National Archives, Copenhagen and the term Danish National Archives came to represent all of the former Danish State Archives collectively. Today, the headquarters of the Danish National Archives, Copenhagen are located at Proviantgården, next to Christiansborg Palace on Slotsholmen. Copenhagen reading room is also located at Proviantgården and is open to the public. A new purpose-built storage building was opened in 2009 at Kalvebod Brygge. It was designed by PLH Arkitekter.[citation needed]

The Danish National Archives, Copenhagen holds the archives of the Danish overseas trading companies, including the archives of the Danish East India Company, the Danish Asiatic Company, the Danish West India and Guinea Company, and the Danish West India Trading Company, a collection which reflects Denmark's relations with foreign countries such as the European States, Russia, Turkey, North African states and the American states. The archives of the Danish overseas trading companies were inscribed on UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register in 1997.[9]

The Sound Toll Records, which provide detailed information about every ship and cargo that entered the Baltic and departed from the Baltic through the Danish straits starting in the 15th century, are held at the Danish National Archives and in 2007, the collection was inscribed on the Memory of the World Register.[10]

The documents are stored on electrically powered mobile shelving – double-sided shelves, which are pushed together so that there is no aisle between them. A large handle on the end of each shelf allows them to be moved along tracks in the floor to create an aisle when needed. The units have a small AC or DC motor hidden in the base that automatically moves the units when a single button is pressed.[citation needed]

Danish National Archives, Aabenraa edit

Danish National Archives, Odense edit

The Provincial Archives of Funen (Danish: Landsarkivet for Fyn) first opened in Odense on 1 November 1893. The first visitor came two weeks later. The archives in Odense were the second of the three provincial archives envisioned in the first Danish archive law of 30 March 1889. They accepted archival material from state authorities, local authorities and individuals within the geographical area of the former Funen County.[citation needed]

In 2014, the Provincial Archives were renamed as the Danish National Archives, Odense as part of the reorganisation of the Danish archival system. Prior to the system's reorganisation, the Provincial Archives of Funen received approximately 10,000 visitors annually, and it contained approximately 20 km of archival material in its collection.[citation needed]

Danish National Archives, Viborg edit

Danish National Archives, Aalborg edit

 
Former Danish National Business Archives.
 
The former great hall and reading room at the national archive in Aalborg

Prior to 2014, the archives in Aarhus were a separate branch of the Danish State Archives, known as the Danish National Business Archives .[8] They collected source material about Danish business development through time. Private companies and organizations were not obligated to supply information so collection happened on a voluntary basis through negotiations and agreements for voluntary submissions. The oldest material is from the 1500s, while the majority from the period of 1850–1950. The collection consisted of about 7000 archives from companies from all sectors of the economy. The archival database Daisy continues to contain the registries over the former collections of the Business Archive, now a part of the Danish National Archives.

The business archive was established as an independent institution in 1948. In 1968 it was taken over by the state with a special law and in 1992 it became part of the State Archives. Before the archives moved to the present building in 1962 the archives were kept in the basement under the City Hall between 1948 and 1950, then under the university building until 1956 and then in the buildings of a former railway station of the defunct Aarhus-Hammel line.[11]

In September 2014, it was announced that the State Archives would move the Business Archives to Viborg and merge it with the Provincial Archives of Northern Jutland in 2015–2016.[12][13]

References edit

  1. ^ "Om os: Organisation". Danish National Archives (in Danish). 19 May 2022. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Om os: Direktionen". Danish National Archives (in Danish). 24 May 2022. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Thomsen, Jørgen (2016). "Rigsarkivet". lex.dk (in Danish). Den Store Danske Encyklopædi. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  4. ^ a b Kargaard Thomsen, Hans (2009). "Gehejmearkivet". lex.dk (in Danish). Den Store Danske Encyklopædi. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  5. ^ Kargaard Thomsen, Hans (2022). "Erhvervsarkivet". lex.dk (in Danish). Den Store Danske Encyklopædi. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  6. ^ Kargaard Thomsen, Hans (2016). "Dansk Data Arkiv". lex.dk (in Danish). Den Store Danske Encyklopædi. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  7. ^ . www.sa.dk. Rigsarkivet. 24 October 2014. Archived from the original on 29 October 2014. Retrieved 24 February 2019. (In Danish)
  8. ^ a b . www.sa.dk. Statens Arkiver. 23 September 2014. Archived from the original on 17 March 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) (In Danish)
  9. ^ . UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. 2008-06-04. Archived from the original on 2008-06-23. Retrieved 2009-12-15.
  10. ^ . UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. 2008-05-16. Archived from the original on 2009-08-05. Retrieved 2009-12-15.
  11. ^ Amatori, Franco; Jones, Geoffrey, eds. (2003). . Cambridge University Press. p. 151. ISBN 9780521821070. Archived from the original on 2022-12-24. Retrieved 2022-12-24.
  12. ^ Rye, Jørgen (23 September 2014). "Erhvervsarkivet flytter fra Aarhus til Viborg". Jyllandsposten (in Danish).
  13. ^ (PDF) (in Danish). Rosendahl. 2014. pp. 5–6. ISBN 978-87-7497-209-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 March 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Jørgensen, A.D. (1884). Udsigt over de Danske Rigsarkivers Historie (in Danish). Copenhagen: Biano Lunos Kgl. Hof-Bogtrykkeri – via Internet Archive.
  • Morgensen, Margit (2001). Rigsarkivet: husene på Slotsholmen (in Danish). Statens Arkiver. ISBN 87-7497-195-6.
  • von Rosen, Wilhelm; Kargaard Thomsen, Hans; Petersen, Vagn Aage, eds. (1983–1991). Rigsarkivet og hjælpemidlerne til dets benyttelse (in Danish). Copenhagen: G.E.C. Gad. 4 Vols. OCLC 1006057064.

55°40′32″N 12°34′52″E / 55.67556°N 12.58111°E / 55.67556; 12.58111

danish, national, archives, danish, rigsarkivet, national, archive, system, denmark, primary, purpose, collect, preserve, archive, historically, valuable, records, from, central, authorities, such, ministries, agencies, national, organisations, make, them, ava. The Danish National Archives Danish Rigsarkivet is the national archive system of Denmark Its primary purpose is to collect preserve and archive historically valuable records from central authorities such as ministries agencies and national organisations and make them available to the public The archive is part of the Ministry of Culture Danish National ArchivesDanish RigsarkivetLogo of the Danish National ArchivesAgency overviewFormed1889 1889 Preceding agenciesGehejmearkivet 1296 1883 Kongerigets Arkiv 1861 1884 Statens Arkiver 2014 JurisdictionGovernment of DenmarkHeadquartersCopenhagen DenmarkEmployees250 1 Agency executivesKarl Hansen National archivistOle Magnus Molbak Andersen Vice directorKirsten Valladsen Kristmar Vice director 2 Parent departmentThe Ministry of CultureWebsiteen wbr rigsarkivet wbr dkPreviously the term Danish State Archives Danish Statens Arkiver was used as the collective name for the archive system In 2014 the archives were reorganised and the name Rigsarkivet which had previously only applied to the Danish National Archives in Copenhagen became the new collective name for the entire archive system Contents 1 History 1 1 Danish State Archives 1 2 Current structure 2 Reading Rooms 2 1 Danish National Archives Copenhagen 2 2 Danish National Archives Aabenraa 2 3 Danish National Archives Odense 2 4 Danish National Archives Viborg 2 5 Danish National Archives Aalborg 3 References 4 Further readingHistory editIn the early Middle ages the majority of records keep by Danish monarchs were packed into chests which accompanied them on their travels around the kingdom The first evidence of permanent government archives comes from the 14th century when an archive was established at Vordingborg Castle Soon after Queen Margaret I established an archive at Kalundborg Castle Danish Kalundborg Slot As Copenhagen had become the seat of the crown King Christopher III established an administrative archive at Copenhagen Castle and in 1582 all of the Royal Archives Danish kongerigets arkiv were gathered in the vault at Copenhagen Castle By 1684 the Royal Archives had been relocated to the newly constructed Rosenborg Castle 3 In 1720 the Royal Archives were again relocated near the former chancery building to be housed at the same location as the Gehejmearkivet lit secret archive or confidential archive 3 4 In 1883 the two archival institutions were overseen by the same director and in 1889 they were officially merged by law The resulting merger formed the National Archives Danish Rigsarkivet 3 4 The same law which established the National Archives also called for the formation of several provincial archives which would be responsible for the curation of local administrative documents within the same archival system 3 In the 20th century two independent archives were established in Denmark the Data Archives Danish Dansk Data Arkiv and the National Business Archives Danish Erhvervsarkivet The business archives were established in 1948 in Aarhus as an independent institution It was acquired by the state in 1962 5 The data archives were established in 1973 it was initially located in Copenhagen but relocated to Odense in 1978 when it became part of Odense University 6 Danish State Archives edit The archival law of 1992 restructured the national archival system so that the entire system was overseen by the Danish State Archives 3 Initially the term Danish State Archives referred collectively to these archives Danish National Archives Copenhagen Danish Data Archives Odense Danish National Business Archives Aarhus Provincial Archives of Zealand Lolland Falster and Bornholm Copenhagen Provincial Archives of Southern Jutland Aabenraa Provincial Archives of Funen Odense Provincial Archives of Northern Jutland Viborg The four provincial archives held records transferred from regional authorities like courts of law the county authorities the police and many other local authorities Records from central authorities such as ministries agencies and national organisations were held at the Danish National Archives The Danish National Business Archives kept registers documents etc from companies and organisations in the business sector The Danish Data Archives the newest of the seven archive holding bodies kept historical and social science studies such as registers databases and other electronically stored information In 2012 the Provincial Archives of Zealand Lolland Falster and Bornholm were disestablished and its collections were merged with the Danish National Archives in Copenhagen Current structure edit In 2014 the State Archives were again restructured the entire organization was centralized under one name and governing body On 1 October 2014 the name Danish State Archives Danish Statens Arkiver was replaced with the name Danish National Archives Danish Rigsarkivet 7 3 Today the name Danish National Archives refers to all archives within the national system not just the organization s headquarters in Copenhagen Under the new structure the separate archives became reading rooms in a larger archive system The new Danish National Archives were initially organised as Danish National Archives Copenhagen formerly the Danish National Archives in Copenhagen Danish National Archives Aarhus formerly the Danish National Business Archives Danish National Archives Aabenraa formerly the Provincial Archives of Southern Jutland Danish National Archives Odense formerly the Provincial Archives of Funen Danish National Archives Viborg formerly the Provincial Archives of Northern Jutland Reading Rooms editToday the Danish National Archives includes four reading rooms the National Archives in Copenhagen Aabenraa Odense and Viborg Until 2015 the archives also had a reading room in Aarhus its collections have since been moved to Viborg 8 Danish National Archives Copenhagen edit nbsp The reading room at the national archive in Copenhagen 2013 The archive was founded in 1889 out of two older national archives Gehejmearkivet 1296 1883 and Kongerigets arkiv 1861 1884 In 2012 the collections of the Provincial Archives of Zealand Lolland Falster and Bornholm were merged into the Danish National Archives In 2014 the Danish National Archives was renamed Danish National Archives Copenhagen and the term Danish National Archives came to represent all of the former Danish State Archives collectively Today the headquarters of the Danish National Archives Copenhagen are located at Proviantgarden next to Christiansborg Palace on Slotsholmen Copenhagen reading room is also located at Proviantgarden and is open to the public A new purpose built storage building was opened in 2009 at Kalvebod Brygge It was designed by PLH Arkitekter citation needed The Danish National Archives Copenhagen holds the archives of the Danish overseas trading companies including the archives of the Danish East India Company the Danish Asiatic Company the Danish West India and Guinea Company and the Danish West India Trading Company a collection which reflects Denmark s relations with foreign countries such as the European States Russia Turkey North African states and the American states The archives of the Danish overseas trading companies were inscribed on UNESCO s Memory of the World Register in 1997 9 The Sound Toll Records which provide detailed information about every ship and cargo that entered the Baltic and departed from the Baltic through the Danish straits starting in the 15th century are held at the Danish National Archives and in 2007 the collection was inscribed on the Memory of the World Register 10 The documents are stored on electrically powered mobile shelving double sided shelves which are pushed together so that there is no aisle between them A large handle on the end of each shelf allows them to be moved along tracks in the floor to create an aisle when needed The units have a small AC or DC motor hidden in the base that automatically moves the units when a single button is pressed citation needed Danish National Archives Aabenraa edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it December 2022 Danish National Archives Odense edit The Provincial Archives of Funen Danish Landsarkivet for Fyn first opened in Odense on 1 November 1893 The first visitor came two weeks later The archives in Odense were the second of the three provincial archives envisioned in the first Danish archive law of 30 March 1889 They accepted archival material from state authorities local authorities and individuals within the geographical area of the former Funen County citation needed In 2014 the Provincial Archives were renamed as the Danish National Archives Odense as part of the reorganisation of the Danish archival system Prior to the system s reorganisation the Provincial Archives of Funen received approximately 10 000 visitors annually and it contained approximately 20 km of archival material in its collection citation needed Danish National Archives Viborg edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it December 2022 Danish National Archives Aalborg edit nbsp Former Danish National Business Archives nbsp The former great hall and reading room at the national archive in AalborgPrior to 2014 the archives in Aarhus were a separate branch of the Danish State Archives known as the Danish National Business Archives 8 They collected source material about Danish business development through time Private companies and organizations were not obligated to supply information so collection happened on a voluntary basis through negotiations and agreements for voluntary submissions The oldest material is from the 1500s while the majority from the period of 1850 1950 The collection consisted of about 7000 archives from companies from all sectors of the economy The archival database Daisy continues to contain the registries over the former collections of the Business Archive now a part of the Danish National Archives The business archive was established as an independent institution in 1948 In 1968 it was taken over by the state with a special law and in 1992 it became part of the State Archives Before the archives moved to the present building in 1962 the archives were kept in the basement under the City Hall between 1948 and 1950 then under the university building until 1956 and then in the buildings of a former railway station of the defunct Aarhus Hammel line 11 In September 2014 it was announced that the State Archives would move the Business Archives to Viborg and merge it with the Provincial Archives of Northern Jutland in 2015 2016 12 13 References edit Om os Organisation Danish National Archives in Danish 19 May 2022 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Om os Direktionen Danish National Archives in Danish 24 May 2022 Retrieved 26 December 2022 a b c d e f Thomsen Jorgen 2016 Rigsarkivet lex dk in Danish Den Store Danske Encyklopaedi Retrieved 26 December 2022 a b Kargaard Thomsen Hans 2009 Gehejmearkivet lex dk in Danish Den Store Danske Encyklopaedi Retrieved 26 December 2022 Kargaard Thomsen Hans 2022 Erhvervsarkivet lex dk in Danish Den Store Danske Encyklopaedi Retrieved 26 December 2022 Kargaard Thomsen Hans 2016 Dansk Data Arkiv lex dk in Danish Den Store Danske Encyklopaedi Retrieved 26 December 2022 Statens Arkiver bliver til Rigsarkivet www sa dk Rigsarkivet 24 October 2014 Archived from the original on 29 October 2014 Retrieved 24 February 2019 In Danish a b Ny magasinplads skal sikre arkivalier for eftertiden www sa dk Statens Arkiver 23 September 2014 Archived from the original on 17 March 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link In Danish Archives of the Danish overseas trading companies UNESCO Memory of the World Programme 2008 06 04 Archived from the original on 2008 06 23 Retrieved 2009 12 15 Sound Toll Registers UNESCO Memory of the World Programme 2008 05 16 Archived from the original on 2009 08 05 Retrieved 2009 12 15 Amatori Franco Jones Geoffrey eds 2003 Business History around the World at the turn of the twenty first century Cambridge University Press p 151 ISBN 9780521821070 Archived from the original on 2022 12 24 Retrieved 2022 12 24 Rye Jorgen 23 September 2014 Erhvervsarkivet flytter fra Aarhus til Viborg Jyllandsposten in Danish Rigsarkivet Arsberetning PDF in Danish Rosendahl 2014 pp 5 6 ISBN 978 87 7497 209 9 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2016 Further reading editJorgensen A D 1884 Udsigt over de Danske Rigsarkivers Historie in Danish Copenhagen Biano Lunos Kgl Hof Bogtrykkeri via Internet Archive Morgensen Margit 2001 Rigsarkivet husene pa Slotsholmen in Danish Statens Arkiver ISBN 87 7497 195 6 von Rosen Wilhelm Kargaard Thomsen Hans Petersen Vagn Aage eds 1983 1991 Rigsarkivet og hjaelpemidlerne til dets benyttelse in Danish Copenhagen G E C Gad 4 Vols OCLC 1006057064 55 40 32 N 12 34 52 E 55 67556 N 12 58111 E 55 67556 12 58111 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Danish National Archives amp oldid 1194985250 Danish National Archives Aalborg, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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