National Museum of Denmark
Denmark's National Museum houses the country's most impressive collection of cultural artifacts, spanning 14,000 years from Stone Age tools to Victorian furniture.
About National Museum of Denmark
Denmark's National Museum houses the country's most impressive collection of cultural artifacts, spanning 14,000 years from Stone Age tools to Victorian furniture. You're here for two main draws: the extraordinarily well-preserved bog bodies (including the famous Tollund Man with his leather cap still intact) and the world-class Viking collection featuring ornate jewelry, weapons, and the stunning Trundholm sun chariot. The prehistoric galleries showcase Denmark's Bronze Age craftsmanship better than anywhere else in Scandinavia.
The museum sprawls across multiple floors in a former royal palace, so expect to do some walking. The Viking halls feel appropriately dramatic with dim lighting that makes the gold artifacts gleam, while the bog body exhibition maintains a respectfully hushed atmosphere. You'll find yourself face to face with people who lived 2,000 years ago, their facial expressions still visible. The medieval section gets crowded around the runic stones, but the ethnographic collections upstairs remain blissfully quiet.
Most visitors spend too much time in the less impressive later periods and rush through the prehistoric sections, which is backwards. The Viking Age and Bronze Age galleries on the ground floor deserve at least 90 minutes, while you can safely skip the 18th and 19th-century rooms unless furniture history excites you. At DKK 120, it's expensive but justified by the bog bodies alone. The audio guide costs extra DKK 30 but adds crucial context to the prehistoric finds.
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