Rosenborg Castle
Rosenborg Castle packs 400 years of Danish royal history into 24 rooms, but honestly, most people come for the basement treasury where the crown jewels live.
About Rosenborg Castle
Rosenborg Castle packs 400 years of Danish royal history into 24 rooms, but honestly, most people come for the basement treasury where the crown jewels live. You'll see three actual coronation crowns (used from 1671 to 1940), Christian IV's emerald set that's genuinely stunning, and the medieval Oldenburg Horn from 1468. The castle itself is Christian IV's Renaissance summer palace from 1624, sitting in Copenhagen's most central park where locals sunbathe and picnic.
The visit starts upstairs in chronological room order, moving through centuries of royal portraits, furniture, and personal belongings. Each room represents a different monarch with their actual possessions: Christian IV's writing desk, royal christening gowns, and even Frederik VII's pipe collection. The atmosphere feels intimate rather than grand, more like touring a wealthy relative's house than Versailles. Then you descend to the treasury, where the lighting turns dramatic and security gets serious around cases of diamonds and emeralds.
Most guides don't mention that the upstairs rooms get repetitive after room 15, so don't feel guilty about moving faster through the later ones. The treasury is genuinely spectacular and worth the DKK 130 alone. Skip the audio guide (DKK 30 extra) since the English wall texts are thorough. The King's Garden outside is free and perfect for recovering afterward, especially in summer when half of Copenhagen seems to be sprawled on the grass.
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