Lars Larsen (1758–1844)

Lars Larsen (25 March 1758 - 18 January 1844) was a Danish merchant, ship-owner and shipbuilder. The Lars Larsen House, (Lars Larsens Gård) his former home in Copenhagen, was listed on the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1918. He has also lent his name to Larsens Plads, a former dockyard located adjacent to Amalienborg Palace.

Lars Larsens Gård

Early life and education

Larsen was born in Copenhagen, the son of silk weaver and later brewer Peder Larsen (c. 1729–1809) and Charlotte Margaretha Larsen née Holm. He apprenticed as a shipbuilder under Erik Eskildsen at Østersøisk-guineisk Handelsselskab's shipyard.[1]

Career

Larsen became master shipbuilder for the consortium.[1]

He was also involved in overseas trade. In 1797, he had the third largest commercial fleet in Copenhagen, only surpassed by the Danish Asiatic Company and Duntzfeldt. He made large investments in land in Copenhagen. In 1802, he purchased Larsens Plads from Duntzfeldt, Meyer & Co. for 42,000 ]]Danish rigsdaler|rigsdaler]] and established a shipyard in the grounds. He was also the owner of the Blue Warehouse and a site on Slotsholmen.[2]

Property

Larsen constructed the first house in the street Kronprinsessegade, now known as the Lars Larsen House. It was completed in 1801 and he lived there until his death in 1844. In 1804, Larsen and Christian Conrad Sophus Danneskiold-Samsøe and Lars Larsen acquired the manors of Egholm and Krabbesholm from Marcus Gøye Rosenkrantz. In 1806, Larsen became the sole owner of Egholm while Danneskiold-Samsøe rook over Krabbesholm. He sold the estate to Harald Rothe in 1809.[3]

Philanthropy

In 1786, Larsen established a public bath for men at Langelinie. In 1787, he established a public bath for women at Langebro. He received a gold medal pro meritis from the king for the initiative.[4]

Family and death

He married Jacobine Ursin (25 March 1772 - 3 October 1819) on 20 March 1807 in the Church of Holmen. She was a daughter of Captain Lieutenant and later Counter Admiral Svend Martin Ursin (1728–1810) and Frederikke Marie Ursin (1741–1816). The couple had two daughters. Caroline Emilie Henriette Larsen (1801-1891), their eldest daughter, married jurist, overpresident and head of police Andreas Christian Kierulff (1782-1846). Charlotte Margrethe Larsen (1809-1887), their younger daughter, married Wilhelm Huth Krag (1800-1887).

Lars Larsen died on 18 January 1844 and is buried at Assistens Cemetery in Copenhagen.

gollark: > Someone in charge of the Discord bots here should write or extend a bot to replace a regex match to replace 0/0 or x/0 by UNDEFINED automatically. Something like re.replace([0-9]*/ 0, UNDEFINED , string) (simplified because I am lazy) , so MrMola can no longer type 0 / 0 and it's automatically shown as UNDEFINED :- )<@520480232738652161> Bots and moderators cannot, for extremely obvious reasons, edit other people's messages.
gollark: As opposed to partial ordering, where some pairs of elements can't be ordered.
gollark: There's an ordering relation which works for all the elements, or something like that.
gollark: Also, does the "totally ordered" bit matter at all? Complex numbers *aren't* totally ordered, right?
gollark: You should probably mention some *specific* contradictions.

References

  1. "København skibsbyggerier og skibsbyggere". jmarcussen.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 5 August 2018.
  2. "Lars Larsen" (in Danish). Dansk Biografisk Leksikon. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
  3. "Egholm (Sjælland) - Ejerhistorie" (in Danish). danskeherregaarde.dk. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
  4. "Amaliehaven på Larsens Plads" (in Danish). Jyllands-Posten. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
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