Sundorph House

Coordinates: 55°40′38.37″N 12°34′53.63″E / 55.6773250°N 12.5815639°E / 55.6773250; 12.5815639
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Sundorph House
Sundorphs Gård
The building seen from Boldhusgade
Map
General information
Architectural styleNeoclassical
LocationCopenhagen, Denmark
Coordinates55°40′38.37″N 12°34′53.63″E / 55.6773250°N 12.5815639°E / 55.6773250; 12.5815639
Construction started1796
Completed1797

The Sundorph House is a Neoclassical property at Ved Stranden 10 in the Old Town of Copenhagen, Denmark. The property has since the late 17th century been owned by members of the Sundorph family. The current building was constructed for tea merchant Mette Christine Sundorph after the previous building at the site was destroyed in the Copenhagen Fire of 1795. It was listed in the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1918.

History[edit]

17th century[edit]

The site was in 1689 part of a larger property (then No. 211) owned by merchant (urtekræmmer) Thomas Torsmide's widow.

17th century[edit]

No. 247 seen in a detail from Christian Gedde's map of the East Quarter, 1757

The property was listed in the new cadastre of 1756 as No. 247, owned by kommerceråd Jacob Olsen's widow.

Sundorph's House as it appeared before the Great Fire of 1795

Hans Pay, who was born in Drammen in 1738, established as a porcelain seller in Copenhagen in 1768. He was licensed as a grocer (urtekræmmer) in 1771 and 1776, but died in 1777. His widow, Mette Christine née Collstrup (1752–1834), took the operations of the company over but it was ceded to her new husband Søren Christian Sundorph (1743–1794) when she married on 21 December 1778. His birth name was Søren Christensen but he had assumed the name Sundorph after his home town Nørre Sundby in the north of Jutland.[1]

Søren Christian and Mette Christine Sundorph resided in the building with their six children (aged one to 12), grocer (employee) Henrich Bohr, two apprentices and two maids at the time of the 1787 census.[2]

On Sundorph's death in 1794, Mette Christine Sundorph once again took over the operations of the company whose name was changed to Mette Christine sal. Sundorphs Enke & Co. ('Metta Christine late Sundorph's Widow & Co.').

The wooden sheds in front of the destroyed Christiansborg Palace

The Sundorph House, together with most of the other buildings in the area, was destroyed in the Copenhagen Fire of 1795. The company was then run from a wooden shed on Slotsholmen until the house at Ved Stranden was rebuilt to a new design in 1797.

The name of the company was changed to Sundorphs Enke & søn ('Sundorph's Widown & Son') when the elder of her two sons, Christian Severin Sundorph (1780–1826), joined it in 1812. The younger son, Hans Pay Sundorph (1790–1860), joined the company in 1816 and became its sole owner upon his brother's death in 1826. The company then took the name H. P. Sundorph. It was later passed on to his son, Georg Christian Sundorph (1826—1875), who joined it in 1856. His widow, Anna Margrethe Sundorph (née v. Stöcken), ran it after his death. Her son, Hans Pay Sundorph, became a partner in the company in 1884 and its sole owner in 1894. It had by then become a tea wholesaler.

19th century[edit]

Hans Pay Sundorph

The property was home to a total of 18 residents in two households at the 1801 census. Sundorph lived in the house with her six children, the associate Peder Jensen and seven more employees.[3] Maria Sophie Fenger, a 28-year-old widow, resided in the building with her three-year-old daughter and one maid.[4] The property was in the new cadastre of 1806 listed as No. 156.

M. C. Sundorph's property was listed in the new cadastre of 1806 as No. 156 in the East Quarter.

The property was at the time of the 1845 census home to a total of 16 people. Hans Pay Sundorph and his wife Else Christine Marie Klinting resided with their two sons, two employees and three servants on the two lower floors.[5] Ferdin. Cons. Schumacher resided with his wife, three children and two maids on the second floor.[6]

The house in the 1900s

The Danish Chamber of Commerce (Grosserer-Societetet) was based in the building prior to their acquisition of the Exchange Building (Børsen) on the other side of the canal in 1857.[7] The building was listed in 1918.[8]

Architecture[edit]

The property (left) seen in a detail from one of Berggreen's block plans of East Quarter, 1886-88

The house is built in the Baroque style and consists of three floors, mansard roof and a cellar. The facade on Boldhusgade is nine bays long while the facade fronting the canal is just three bays long. The roof is clad with black-glazed tiles. A three-bay wall dormer faces Boldhusgade and a single-bay wall dormer faces Ved Stranden. The four-storey side wing is five bays long.

Gallery[edit]

Today[edit]

The building is now owned by Caroline Sundorph Pontoppidan. The ground floor is home to a combined wine shop, wine bar and lunch restaurant in the ground floor.[9]

Further reading[edit]

  • Foltmakr, Kai: Sundorphs Hus, Historiske Meddelelser om København (1963)

References[edit]

  1. ^ "H. P. SUNDORPH". coneliand.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  2. ^ "Folketælling - 1787 - Søren Christian Sundorph". dis-danmark.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  3. ^ "Folketælling - 1801 -Mette Kirstine Sundorph". nishfamilysearch.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  4. ^ "Folketælling - 1801 - Maria Sophie Fenger". nishfamilysearch.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  5. ^ "Folketælling - 1845 - Hans Pay Sundorph". nishfamilysearch.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  6. ^ "Folketælling - 1845 - Ferdin. Cons. Schumacher". nishfamilysearch.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  7. ^ "Ved Stranden 10". indenforvoldene.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  8. ^ "Sag: Sundorphs Hus". Kulturstyrelsen (in Danish). Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  9. ^ "SaVed Stranden 10". aok.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 27 October 2016.

External links[edit]