Rådhusstræde 11
Rådhusstræde 11 is an early 18th-century building on Rådhusstræde, between Gammeltorv-Nytorv and Frederiksholms Kanal, in the Old Town of Copenhagen, Denmark. It was listed in the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1945. The Supreme Court attorney Christian Klingberg lived in the building as a child.
History
18th century
The property was listed as No. 49 in Snaren's Quarter in Copenhagen's first cadastre of 1689. It was at that time owned by tailor Morten Jensen. The current building on the site was constructed in 17301734 for lawyer Andreas Bruun. The property was listed as No. 43 in the new cadastre of 1756 and was then owned by Bruun's widow.At the time of the 1787 census, the building was home to 17 residents in four households. Lauritz Reitzer, a royal lackey, resided in one of the apartments with his wife Magrethe Sofie Jæger, his father-in-law Christian Jæger and two maids. Karen Lund Klingberg, a 54-year-old widow with a pension from Enkekassen, resided in the building with her son Christian Klingberg, who would later become a prominent Supreme Court attorney, and one maid. Her late husband Jacob Klingberg had served as notarius publicus in the Danish West Indies. The third household consisted of plumber and fireman Jacob Hansen Bennefeet and his wife Anne Kirstine. Jens Ibsen, another royal lackey, resided in the building with his wife Dorthe Catrine, their two children, an eight-year-old boy who lived with them after orders from the Crown Prince, a wet nurse and a maid.
Kield Clementsen, c. 1800-1840s
The property belonged to the civil servant Kield Clemensen at the time of the 1801 census. He resided in the building with his wife Friderica Reutzer and two maids. Johannes Clemensen, a manager, resided in the building with his wife Sophia Amalie Stenum, their two sons and one maid. Hans Peter Winge, a royal lackey and later steward of the Prince's Mansion, resided in the building with his wife Margretha Hvid, their two sons, one maid, and one lodger. The last household consisted of plumber Jacob Beentfeld, his wife Anne Kirstine Pedersdatter and the three-year-old girl Maria Andrup.Clementsen's property was listed in the new cadastre of 1806 as No. 41 in Snaren's Quarter. The military officer Jacob Elias Holm resided in the building with his mother from at least 1818. They still lived there when his mother died in 1831. In 1832, he moved to the ground floor of Nybrogade No. 20 (now Nybrogade 24).
At the time of the 1840 census, the building was home to a total of nine people. 77-year-old Kjeld Clementsen was now residing on the ground floor with one maid. Laurits Clementsen, a naval surgeon, resided on the second floor with his employee Andrea Magdalene Ulriche Bastian. Chr. Hein. Just Hübner, a singer at the Royal Danish Theatre, resided on the first floor with his wife Fr. Magdalene Hübner and two maids. Christopher Schmidt, a Candidatus Philosoph., resided alone on the third floor.