Wed, Apr 24, 4:26 AM CDT

Holmens kirke and Thundershield

Photography Historical posted on Jul 28, 2015
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


Copenhagen, Holmens kirke and Thundershield. Photo taken from the tower on top the Danish Parliament ("Folketinget"). The church left "Holmens Kirke" (Church of the Islet). The Danish king, Christian the fourth made an earlier anchor smithy into a church in 1619 and again expanded it to a cruciform church in 1649 as we it see today. That time the water and channels were filled with ships and boats and had a much greater extent in area, including most of the streets below. Along the channel right, another interesting building, by the same king, Christian the fourth, the beuatiful baroque Exchange Building ("Børsen") . The area around the current Holmen Church was originally a small islet ("Holmen") placed opposite to the city's former coastline. The navy's shipyard was placed here until the city development with increasing population made it necessary to move it farther away. Houses for the sailors and the church was build. So the old islet became "Gammelholm"(Old Islet) and the new shipyard place became "Nyholm" (New Islet). The church avoided Copenhagen's many fires and it still looks like it did that time both outside as well as inside. Really worth a visit. An interesting detail, the little tower in the middle of the church was part of the original anchor smithy. The church has always been associated to the navy and The Danish Royal House. And maybe most interesting - the Danish-Norwegian naval hero Thundershield (Tordenskjold) rests inside. His death by a fatal duel - duels was forbidden - gave some controversy with his funeral, maybe mostly because of his enimies among nobles and in the navy. His fortune disappeared during a year-long lawsuit (stolen is the right word, I guess) and at first his corpse laid in a wooden coffin in the crypt under the church. In 1819, nearly a hundred years after his death, he got a fine marble sarcophacus in the church. But a real official funeral he first got in 1995!!.. But he is still a great hero in both Norway and in Denmark. Salute!.. Rhanagaz JohnnyC :o)

Comments (13)


)

mininessie

1:58PM | Tue, 28 July 2015

great pic!

)

GOLDILOCKSUK

3:06PM | Tue, 28 July 2015

Wow now that's an impressive shot great posting! Cathy xoxoxo

)

Faemike55

3:21PM | Tue, 28 July 2015

Fabulous capture and cool information

)

Richardphotos

4:02PM | Tue, 28 July 2015

beautiful city and capture

)

Diemamker

4:34PM | Tue, 28 July 2015

Great city shot!!.. looks like you were way up!..

)

jendellas

5:30PM | Tue, 28 July 2015

Beautiful photo, there is a lot going on. Great info. xxx

)

durleybeachbum

5:44PM | Tue, 28 July 2015

Extremely interesting to read all about it, and a fascinating photograph.

)

eekdog

10:11PM | Tue, 28 July 2015

great capture and info, johnny..

)

flavia49

12:15AM | Wed, 29 July 2015

beautiful

)

bakapo

12:18AM | Wed, 29 July 2015

a fantastic shot!

)

jocko500

3:29AM | Wed, 29 July 2015

wonderful

)

RodS

1:06AM | Thu, 30 July 2015

A great shot of your beautiful and historic city, Johnny!

)

danapommet

3:06AM | Mon, 03 August 2015

A spectacular photo and thank you for the wonderful history around this area! Een spectaculaire foto en bedankt voor de prachtige geschiedenis rond dit gebied!


7 54 0

Photograph Details
F Numberf/6.3
MakeCanon
ModelCanon EOS 550D
Shutter Speed1/2000
ISO Speed400
Focal Length25

00
Days
:
19
Hrs
:
33
Mins
:
42
Secs
Premier Release Product
JA Nord for Genesis 8 Female
3D Figure Assets
Sale Item
$16.50 USD 40% Off
$9.90 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.