Holmens Cemetery

Holmens Cemetery

The Battle of Copenhagen Memorial
Details
Year established 1666
Country Denmark
Location Østerbro, Copenhagen
Size hectares
Website Official web site

Holmens Cemetery (Danish: Holmens Kirkegård) is the oldest cemetery still in use in Copenhagen, Denmark. It was first located next to the naval Church of Holmen in the city centre but relocated to its current site on Dag Hammarskjölds Allé in the Østerbro district in 1666. The cemetery originally served as a burial site for indigent sailors in royal service and their families, complementing the military Garnisons Cemetery, from 1711 located on a neighbouring site.

Contents

History

When the anchor forge at Bremerholm was converted into a naval church by Christian IV in 1619, a churchyard was laid out next to it.[1] It remained in use until 1651 but was then, following an extension of the church between 1641 and 1649, relocated to a site outside the Bastioned Fortifications, next to the main road leading in and out of the Eastern City Gate. The grounds had already been in use as a cemetery since 1662[1] but was inaugurated as the new Holmens Cemetery in 1666.

The existing layout of the cemetery was created by sær F.C. Schmidt in 1798.[1]

Chapel

The chapel at Holmens Cemetery was built in 1902 to the design of architect and professor Ludvig Fenger. He favoured the Historicist styles and in Copenhagen he had already designed St. James' Church (1876–78) in a Gothic Revival style and St. Mathew's Cgurch (1878–80) in a Romanesque Revival style. In his design of the chapel at Holmens Cemetery he relied on traditional Nordic stave churches for inspiration.[2]

The chapel is an adapted stave church design, lacking the tall, tower-like appearance which is normally seen in such buildings, but the shingled slate roof, the tarred timber and the carved animal heads are characteristic features.[2]

Battle of Copenhagen Memorial

There is a memorial for naval personnel killed in the Battle of Copenhagen from 1802. It consists of a tumulus topped by an obelisk designed by Johannes Wiedewelt.[1][1]

Internents

  • Johannes Hohlenberg
  • Hakon Holm
  • H.P. Holst
  • Knud Høgenhaven
  • Johan Christian Islef
  • Kristine Marie Jensen
  • Emil Jeppesen
  • Niels-Jørgen Kaiser
  • Thorvald Kierkegaard
  • Jørgen-Bent Kistorp
  • Frits Hammer Kjølsen
  • Fritz Koch
  • Julius Koppel
  • Eyvind Kornbeck
  • Peter Kornbeck
  • A.F. Krieger
  • Torben Krogh
  • Frederik Vinding Kruse
  • Albert Køie-Nielsen
  • Harald Lander
  • Sven Lange
  • Rued Langgaard
  • Helge Larsen
  • Hugo Larsen
  • Robert Leepin
  • Orla Lehmann
  • Per Linnemann-Schmidt
  • Mogens Lorentzen
  • Carl Lumbye
  • Georg Lumbye
  • H.C. Lumbye
  • Tippe Lumbye
  • Emil Lund
  • J.L. Lund
  • Karen Lykkehus
  • Jørgen Læssøe
  • Oscar Matthiesen
  • Vilhelm Melbye
  • Anton Michelsen
  • Randi Michelsen
  • Nils Middelboe
  • Balthasar Münter
  • Holger Munk
  • Dea Trier Mørch
  • Gert Nielsen
  • Hans-Jørgen Nielsen
  • Lars Nordskov Nielsen
  • Helge Nissen
  • Julius Paulsen

See also

References

External links