Things tagged with "hyttegulve"

Brian Patrick McGuire
Middle Ages: Christian scholars - Denmark becomes Christian
In the High Middle Ages (1000-1300), something of a miracle happened in Denmark. Thanks to monks and the ambitions of the nobility, the country was enriched by architecture, art and learning. The rise of Christianity put Denmark in the first European community defined by this religion. The…

Anna-Elisabeth Jensen
The struggle for the Baltic Sea - Fish, money, power
In the 11th and 12th centuries, controlling the Baltic Sea meant controlling trade in the entire region. Salted herring and other fish were guaranteed sources of income. In the 13th century, the Hanseatic League emerged. Originally a trading confederation made up of coastal Low German market towns …

Lars Bisgaard
The Count’s Feud - A civil war for God, class and country
The Count's Feud is one of the most important events in Danish history. Years of tension between the Hanseatic League and Denmark came to a head when Lübeck sent troops to Denmark, ostensibly to free King Christian II. Meanwhile, Protestants began their onslaught against the established…

Per Ingesman
Nobility and King - The age of the nobility
The period between the Reformation in 1536 and the introduction of absolute monarchy in 1660 is known as the the age of the nobility. After the Reformation had done away with the Church as a power player and an independent institution, the nobility became the most important of the king's…

Søren Mentz
King Christian IV - Grand buildings and broken dreams
Christian IV (1577-1648) is probably the best known king in Danish history in part because he left behind a trail of spectacular buildings that include Frederiksborg Castle, Copenhagen’s Old Stock Exchange and the Round Tower. He also founded districts and towns like Christianshavn and…

Michael Bregnsbo
Absolute monarchy - The foundation of the welfare state
Absolute monarchy in Denmark refers not just to a type of government, it also refers to the period 1660-1848. During this period, Denmark as a state and society underwent fundamental changes. Compared with other countries, the period of the absolute monarchs in Denmark was unique - partly because…

Birgitte Holten
Denmark between Britain and France - Hostage of the great powers
The complicated international situation around the year 1800 saw Denmark become a hostage of the conflicts of the great powers. The country's foreign policy during these years had three primary objectives: maintain its neutrality, ensure the survival of the dual monarchy Denmark-Norway, and to …

Thomas Wegener Friis
The Cold War - The Russians never came
No sooner was World War II over than a new war had begun. Until the fall of the Berlin Wall, the Cold War divided not just the world, it also divided countries and even families. It was a conflict that pitted democracy against dictatorship, and with both sides armed with nuclear weapons, it was a…

Erland Porsmose
Lord of the manor and of the village - The manor as the seat of power
Danish landlords have held considerable power throughout history. Those loyal to the Crown helped to set up an army of knights, were exempted from paying taxes and given dominion over the population of entire villages. During the 16th century, lords came to be known as nobles, and by the 17th…

Erland Porsmose
Serfdom - Tied to the land of their birth
For centuries, serfdom kept Danish peasants bound to their local landlord. They were a source of cheap labour for wealthy landowners and could only move away if granted permission to do so. The first peasants began to break the bonds of serfdom in the late 18th century, starting the gradual…

Søren Byskov
Herring, cod and other fish - Industrialising the sea
Denmark became one of the world's leading fishing countries in the early 20th century when fishermen began using a highly effective net – the Danish seine – to catch plaice. Historically, Danish catches have included whales, seals, cod, plaice, salmon and eel. During the Middle Ages,…

Henrik Harnow
Maritime Denmark - The port to commerce and leisure
Seafaring has deep roots in Denmark. Keeping 400 islands connected with the mainland has required centuries of sailing. The maritime environment is evident everywhere. And even though Denmark is a small country, its coasts are home to everything from major industrial ports to small fishing harbours…

Flemming Just
The great movements - Power to the people
The rise of the cooperative movement and the labour movement are two pivotal developments in the evolvement of the Danish society. They emerged in Denmark at the same time as in other European countries towards the close of the 19th century. Farmers and factory workers organised in order to give…

Caspar Jørgensen
Industry - From mills to computers
Even though Denmark is known as an agricultural nation, industry has played a major role in the development of the welfare state. Around 1840, factories began to appear in earnest, and soon more were working industrial jobs than in agriculture. And between 1930 and 1970, the industrial sector was…

Anne Nørgaard Jørgensen
War and peace - Military installations of the past
Danish military history is heavily influenced by the country’s strategic position between the Baltic Sea and continental Europe. Castles, castle mounds, barracks and other military installations from nearly every historical period stand rank and file throughout the country. Denmark’s attractive …

Tyge Krogh
Crime and punishment - From the noose to the electric tag
That crime doesn't pay is something punishment has always needed to prove. But the way criminals are punished has changed radically down through history. At one point capital punishment was common, and the sentence was often justified by citing God's law". Today, criminals need not…

Tim Knudsen
Power and resistance - A land of peace
Question: in which country did the last regicide take place over 700 years ago? Where did the last civil war take place over 500 years ago? Where did national sentiment only arise in the 19th century? Where have first farmers, then workers been responsible for political reforms? Where are people…

Inger-Marie Børgesen
A place for the sick - From bloodletting to super hospitals
The health system we know today has its roots in the 19th century, in an age when the institutions for the sick became institutions of treatment. The sick were hospitalised and treated by doctors and nurses with the expectation that they could be healed. Hospitals are not an old institution in a…

Niels Kayser Nielsen
A time of leisure - A holiday for every class
Leisure time is something we take for granted, but that hasn't always been the case. At one time, only nobles or the wealthy middle class had time to visit the coast, go to the theatre or hunt. Eventually, white-collar workers were granted the right to holiday and time off at the weekend, when …

Camilla Mordhorst
History in the making - History is everywhere
History is more than just events and heroic tales. History sneaks its way in everywhere, and it is created every day in even the most humble of places. It is a part of buildings, natural landscapes, it is in our words and our habits. But the understanding of what is history, and what isn’t, has…

Vibeke Andersson Møller
Architecture: classicism, historicism and modernism - From antiquity to concrete
Danish architectural styles have changed many times from the mid-18th century to the mid-20th century. The styles have reflected the changing architectural ideals of the day, as well as the purely practical limitations of construction technology. Originally taking the cue from antiquity and…

Martin Zerlang
Artists - Art – on location
There is a close connection between a place and the art that is created there. Danish poets and painters have always been a part of the place they lived – be it Kiergegaard's Copenhagen or Krøyer's Skagen. But place, too, is also very much defined by art.

Malene Hauxner, RIP
Trends of landscape gardening - The battle for the garden
Whether the untamed or the tended landscape is most beautiful is a discussion that has raged among gardeners for ages. Gardening has often served as an indicator of the prevailing philosophies of the day: during the period of the absolute monarchs, pleasure gardens featured forests and tree-lined…

Uffe Jakobsen
The cradle of democracy - From absolute monarchy to parliamentarism
Starting in the 1830s and until 1915, three decisive changes were implemented that were crucial for the development of democracy in Denmark. Citizens were given a legislature, the right to vote was expanded from just a small percentage of the population to nearly all adults and the introduction of …

Louise Straarup
The Danish Arts Foundation - Art production for the public throughout Denmark
2014 is the Danish Arts Foundation's 50th anniversary. The production of art in public spaces is the most visible and immediately accessible result of the Foundation's activities.










Relaterede tags
Bopladser Brommekultur Holmegård IV Maglemosekultur Trollesgave buer flinthugning organisk materiale pile ældre stenalder Arrows Bromme culture Holmegaard IV Maglemosian culture Trollesgave bows flint chipping hut floors late stone age organic material settlements