Charlottenlund Palace

Charlottenlund Palace was built for and named after Christian VI's sister Charlotte Amalie in 1731-33. It was probably designed by the architect Johan Cornelius Krieger under the supervision of the engineer officer H.H. Scheel and was not so much a new palace, as a refurbishment and expansion of an older country seat called Gyldenlund.

For many years during the 19th century Princess Louise Charlotte and landgrave Vilhelm of Hessen occupied the palace, until Crown Prince Frederik VIII and his wife Louise took it over in 1869. They had the architect Ferdinand Meldahl radically alter the palace in 1880-81: two bay windows, two transverse wings and a dome with lanterns were all added. The Baroque palace completely changed character, re-emerging in French Renaissance style. In 1883, Meldahl also added cavalier's quarters and a chancellery along Jægersborg Allé 1.

Both Christian X and his brother prince Carl, who was named King Håkon of Norway in 1905, were born at Charlottenlund Palace and the Queen Mother Louise lived there until she died in 1926. The royal family stopped using the castle in 1935 when it was refurbished for the benefit of the Danish Institute of Fisheries and Ocean Research which moved in the following year.

Charlottenlund Palace is owned by the Danish state, run by the Palaces and Properties Agency and used by the National Institute of Aquatic Resources (DTU Aqua).

Last updated::  Thursday, September 16, 2010
Charlottenlund Slot - Foto: Finn Christoffersen