Proviantgården

Coordinates: 55°40′27″N 12°34′49″E / 55.6743°N 12.5802°E / 55.6743; 12.5802
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Proviantgården
Map
Alternative namesProvianthuset
General information
Coordinates55°40′27″N 12°34′49″E / 55.6743°N 12.5802°E / 55.6743; 12.5802
Completedc. 1605
Technical details
Floor count2

Proviantgården or Provianthuset is a historic building on

MPs as well as the Copenhagen reading rooms of the National Archives
.

History

In the 1590s, Christian IV began building a new naval harbor on Slotsholmen. Proviantgården was constructed by the builder Bernt Pejtersen around 1605. The building was meant to furnish the king's ships with provisions when they came into the harbor.[1][2] As such Holmen's grainstores were transferred to the building after it was completed.[1]

The building has been damaged by three different fires, in 1626, 1719, and most recently in 1992.[3] After a fire ravaged the building in 1626, the quartermaster who oversaw the building issued a promissory note to the king worth 2,000 sletdaler to be used for the timber to reconstruct the building. Because he made this payment to the king, it is believed that the quartermaster was to blame for the fire, though there is no record that he was prosecuted.[1]

The naval dock was decommissioned and subsequently filled in during the 1860s.[3]

Architecture

Rigsarkivet

Of the original building, only the robust brick walls, which are more than two meters thick, survive.[4][5] The building is 163 metres long and two storeys high. A passageway, Proviantpassagen, runs between the west side of the building and the wall that surrounds the Royal Library Garden, linking Rigsdagsgården with the Christians Brygge waterfront. The building is listed as a historic monument.[4]

Gallery

  • Depiction of the building as a supplies building c. 1749.
    Depiction of the building as a supplies building c. 1749.
  • Depiction of Tøjhus Dock with Proviantgården. Christian Hetsch, c. 1850.
    Depiction of Tøjhus Dock with Proviantgården. Christian Hetsch, c. 1850.
  • The building as seen from the Royal Library Garden, 2016.
    The building as seen from the Royal Library Garden, 2016.

References

  1. ^ a b c Klem, Knud (1977). "Christian 4. og Bremerholm". Årbog (in Danish). 36. Handels- og Søfartsmuseet på Kronborg: 78–79.
  2. ^ Smidt, Claus M. (2006). Renæssancens Bygninger: Bygningskulturens Dag 2006 (PDF) (in Danish). Copenhagen: Kulturarvsstyrelsen. p. 53.
  3. ^ a b Smed, Mette (2014). "Proviantgården". lex.dk (in Danish). Den Store Danske Encyklopædi. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  4. ^ a b "Sag: Proviantgården". Kulturstyrelsen (in Danish). Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  5. ^ Andersen, Einar (1966). "Geodætisk Institut". Fortid og Nutid (in Danish). 22.