Knabrostræde 19
Knabrostræde 19 is a Neoclassical property situated at the corner of Knabrostræde and Kompagnistræde in the Old Town of Copenhagen, Denmark. It was constructed by Johan Martin Quist as part of the rebuilding of the city following the Copenhagen Fire of 1795. The building was listed in the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1918., Copenhagen's leading comedy club, is based in the building. Notable former residents include the musician and composer Ivar Bredal and the architectural painter Niels Bredal.
History
117th and 18th centuries
In the middle of the 17th century the property belonged to Icelandic merchant and brewer Rasmus Hansen Munk 1647-). His property was listed in Copenhagen's first cadastre of 1689 as No. 54 in Snaren's Quarter. On 16 December 1691, he was elected as one of the city's 32 Men. On 3 July 1711, he was awarded the title of kommerceråd. On 24 July 1713, he was appointed as Supreme Court justice. He died on 8 April 1724. He was married two times.A later owner of the property was Herman Jacobsen Gamst. He was raised in Store Fuglede Rectory as the son of the local pastor Jacob Christensen Gamst. He had initially been trained as a barber/surgeon before settling as a merchant in Odsherred. On 12 July 1751, he was licensed as a brewer in Copenhagen. Gamst died in 1755. His widow Margrethe Kirstine Jacobsdatter Juel continued the brewery until at least 1768.
The building was prior to the 1787 census acquired by brewer Jens Michelsen Hostrup. He was at that time residing on his property with his wife Jens Michelsen Hostrupm their two sons, his mother-in-law Anna Maria Holm, the 18-year-old relative Mette Kirstine Gregersen, one brewer, One brewer's apprentice, a caretaker and two maids. Hostrup was originally from Mariager. His paternal uncle Jens Andersen Hostrup owned a brewery in Brolæggerstræde. Jens Michelsen Hostrup died in 1791. Dorthea Christine Hostrup was the following year married to the book printer J.F. Schultz, He was the owner of a property at Højbrostræde 64.
The property in Knabrostræde was destroyed in the Copenhagen Fire of 1795, together with most of the other buildings in the area. The current buildings on the site was constructed in 1797-98 by Johan Martin Quist.
19th century
The property was shortly after its completion sold to distiller Johan Christensen. At the time of the 1801 census, it was home to 21 residents in four households. Johan Christensen resided in one of the apartments with his wife Johan Christensenm their two daughters, a distillery worker and a maid. Lauritz Stang, a Norwegian trainee in the central administration, resided in another apartment with his wife Johanne Conradi, their one-year-old daughter, the wifeøs sister Caroline Stang and two maids. Johan Forsten, a musician, resided in a third apartment with his wife Marinette Holm, their five-year-old daughter and a maid. Christine Beck, a 48-year-old widow, resided in the basement with a three-year-old girl in her care, one maid and three lodgers.The property was listed as No. 51 in the new cadastre of 1806. It was at that time still owned by Johan Christensen.
At the time of the 1840 census, No. 51 was home to just 12 people. Johannes Mesle?? Melbye, a merchant, resided on the ground floor with his wife Magdalene Ernstine Louise, their 24-year-old daughter Johanne Lovise Melbye and one maid. The other residents were eight lodgers and one maid on the second floor. Most of the lodgers were students. The lodger Fritz Adolph Schmiegelow would later serve as pharmacist in Rønne on Bornholm.
At the time of the 1845 census, No. 51 was home to three households. Melbye was still residing on the ground floor with his wife and daughter in 1845. Ivar Bredal, a musician and composer, resided on the first floor with his three children, a housekeeper and a maid. His then four-year-old son Niels Bredal would later become a painter. Ane Kirstine Wolters, widow of customs inspector in Frederikshavn H. J. Wolters, resided on the second floor with her two children, Kammerjunker Peter Thestrup, four lodgers and one maid.
The ground floor had by 1850 been converted into a tavern. The proprietor H. Petersen and his wife Marie resided with a maid in the associated dwelling. I.D. Engmann, a helmsman, resided in the basement with his wife I. H. Engmann and their five children.
When house numbering by street was introduced in 1859, as a supplement to the old cadastral numbers by quarter, No. 51 became listed as Knabrostræde 10 and Kompagnistræde 19.
At the time of the 1860 census, No. 51 was home to 39 residents in six households. Ole Christiansen, a greengrocer, resided in the basement with his wife Marie Christiansen, their five children and one maid. Wilhelm Ausberg Heé, a master shoemaker, resided on the first floor with his wife Jacobine Wilhelmine Heé and their three children. Peter Gustav Wilhelm Nyman, a helmsman, resided in one of two dwellings on the second floor with his wife Marie Sophie Katrine and their five children. Hanne Bagger, a 58-year-old unmarried woman resided in the other second floor dwelling with the cooper Peter Andreas Holm, the cooper's wife Ida Magrete Holm and their three children. Marie Lyngby and her 24-year-old son Carl August Lyngby shared one of two dwellings on the third floor with the office clerk Moses Philipsen and his wife Jette Philipsen. Jensine Jensen, Marie Holst and Hansine Paulin Mullerthree unmarried women occupied with needleworkresided in the other dwelling on the third floor.
20th century
An art house cinema, Delta Bio, opened in the building in 1977. It closed in 1993.In 1998, Comedy Zoo, Denmark's first comedy club, relocated from Baron Boltens Gård to the cinema's former premises at Knabrostræde 19. In 2018, Comedy Zoo
was sold to the stand-up comedians Thomas Hartmann, Dan Andersen, Torben Chris, Anders Fjelsted, Michael Schøt and Comedy Zoo CEO Martin Bo Andersen.