Denmark
Vanløse

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    • Day 48

      Copenhagen Day Tour - Part 4

      May 3, 2023 in Denmark ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

      Copenhagen 3/5
      Last stop was Kronborg (Crown) Castle, 4km across the water from Sweden and of course very strategic in the protection of Denmark with its many cannons pointed seaward and a zigzag entryway so the enemy couldn’t shoot straight through the front gate. https://hamlettours.com/kronborg-castle/ We wound up and down stairs and into the high-up ballroom and down into the dungeons. Benjie was great with the kids and Ellie especially was following right behind him, hanging on his every word. We parked outside a big marina and ferry port and crossed over the old dry docks which have now been turned into a marine museum and café, then had a bit of a walk through the grounds to the old moat. There was a lot to see in a short time but we made the most of it. I really liked the chapel, one of the few parts of the castle not to have been burned down a few centuries ago. It was quite simple but looking carefully, all the carved pew ends were different and detailed. One room was being renovated, all the painted ceiling panels had been taken down, cleaned, and were in the process of being put back up, not sure if the room would stay white as you can see in the photo, but it certainly makes the colours of the panels stand out.

      A few stories:
      One of the kings got to mid-30’s, still unmarried, got desperate and asked the various kingdoms to send paintings of likely princesses. He checked them all out (like Tinder, one bright spark said, swipe left or right) and chose Princess Anna who turned up with an entourage of 40 and……..she didn’t look anything like the painting. So that was a no from him. However, she had her cousin with her, Sophie, she was only 14 and he fancied her. So Anna was put aside to wait for a ship to take her home, they had furnished her rather small room, it even had her slippers alongside the bed. The king waited until Sophie was 15 and married her, they had children and lived……..not very happily ever after because he died quite young.

      Story about the ballroom, HUGE room 62m long, with a turret room in one corner that was used as a toilet: it was filled with hay, people did what they needed to and the servants pushed the hay out through a door to outside the turret. The kids (and adults) liked that story.

      Bedwarmers – simple: put two or three servants in the bed until you were ready to turn in, out go the servants and in goes the king etc into a nice warm bed.

      And the castle attics, why did they have a whole lot of wheat stored up there? Because they made an enormous amount of beer, the soldiers had an allowance per day of 8 litres, it was stored in vats and barrels in the dungeons along with vast quantities of salted herrings. The soldiers had herrings and beer six days a week, meat only on one day a week, not a great diet. The soldiers lived down in the cellars and guarded the prisoners, low ceilings and very very dark, a very authentic feel when we were walking through over uneven ground.

      So that was our excellent tour, everyone was pretty tired afterwards and very happy to be dropped off at our door at the end.
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    • Day 48

      Copenhagen Day Tour - part 2

      May 3, 2023 in Denmark ⋅ ☀️ 11 °C

      Copenhagen 3/5
      Second stop was the Viking Ship Museum where they have five ships which had been scuttled in the channel, by filling them with stones, to protect the town from attack – stop enemies getting to it. The displays detailed how they were found, then the process of raising them, preserving them piece by piece. I’ve copied this:

      The five ships displayed in the Viking Ship Museum were sunk around the year 1070. They were originally built between 1024 and 1040. This has been established by studying the rings of the wood from the ships. It has also been established that the ships were built in Ireland, Norway and Denmark. This underlines the size of the Viking empire. The largest of the five ships is a Viking war ship that could carry 60 warriors on the famous Viking raids where we conquered England, Paris, Normandy and many other regions and towns across Western Europe. The other ships were cargo and fishing ships. The ships were raised from the seabed in 1962. The local fishermen had known about the ship wrecks for a long time before that. One additional ship actually got lost because the fishermen caught part of it in their nets and used it as fire wood during the second world war.

      As you can see in the photos they are well set out, and there’s a replica ship built to scale by the looks of it where kids can dress up and pretend to be Vikings, sit on the boards to row the ship etc. Ellie loved it.

      They had gaming pieces found in the area, copies of tapestries depicting Vikings, and a good photo description of how the replica, now in the marina next to the museum, was built. There were some other ships outside, one with school kids all squished onto the rowing benches, and a small ship with its sail up out in the channel. Also there are workshops where they show how things were done. Another worthwhile place to see, and not enough time to see it all unfortunately.

      Benjie made a fair point about keeping to time – the tour takes roughly nine hours, they need to be on time for the pickup (we weren’t, had to wait several minutes for the last person to join us at the main departure place) and at each departure point because it’s timed for traffic, opening hours etc. We did have our time at Roskilde cut short a bit, and the last place was a rush because there’d been a traffic jam at one point. However, in the long run it was well worth doing the tour.

      Keep reading for parts 3 and 4
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Vanløse, Vanlose

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