Den Kongelige Samling

The Royal Collections of Denmark

A thousand years of crowns, chronicles and castles — preserved within the granite walls of the oldest monarchy in Europe.

Velkommen

Where royal memory still lives

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From the Renaissance summerhouse of Christian IV to the working palace of Queen Margrethe II, Denmark’s royal residences hold one of Europe’s most continuous collections of regalia, paintings, tapestry and silver. This site is an informational guide — a way to walk through that history before you ever set foot in Copenhagen.

Rosenborg Castle
Rosenborg Slot · 1606

Rosenborg Castle

A Dutch-Renaissance summer retreat that became the treasury of the Danish kings. Home to the Crown Jewels and the regalia of the absolute monarchy.

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Amalienborg Palace
Amalienborg · 1750s

Amalienborg Palace

Four identical Rococo palaces around an octagonal square — the official winter residence of the reigning monarch since the fire of Christiansborg in 1794.

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Christiansborg Palace
Christiansborg · 1928

Christiansborg Palace

Built three times over, on the foundations of Bishop Absalon’s fortress. Today it houses the parliament, the supreme court and the royal reception halls.

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Frederiksborg Castle
Frederiksborg · 1620

Frederiksborg Castle

The grandest Renaissance palace in Scandinavia, set on three islets in Hillerød. Since 1878 it has held the Museum of National History.

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Kronborg Castle
Kronborg · 1585

Kronborg Castle

The fortress that controlled the Sound and inspired Shakespeare’s Elsinore. Listed by UNESCO as a masterpiece of Northern European Renaissance architecture.

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Koldinghus
Koldinghus · 13th c.

Koldinghus

The last royal fortress in Jutland, repeatedly rebuilt after fires and wars. A study in Danish craftsmanship from medieval to modern restoration.

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1.150+Years of Monarchy
55Sovereign Reigns
12Royal Residences
400.000+Catalogued Objects
The crown is not gold and stone. It is the memory of a people, gathered in a single room. — Notes on the Treasury, Rosenborg
A Living Story

From Gorm the Old to Margrethe II

The royal house of Denmark traces its origin to King Gorm the Old, who ruled before 958. His son, Harald Bluetooth, raised the great Jelling stones — the “baptismal certificate of Denmark” — and gave shape to a kingdom that has never since lost its crown.

Read the Full Timeline