Memorial Anchor, Copenhagen

The Memorial Anchor (Danish: Mindeankret), located at the base of the Nyhavn canal, adjacent to Kongens Nytorv, is a maritime memorial in Copenhagen, Denmark, commemorating the civilian sailors who lost their lives at sea during the Second World War.

The Memorial Anchor

History

A wooden cross was in 1945 placed at the site to commemorate the civilian sailors who had lost their lives during the war years 1939–1945. In 1948, it was replaced by a cross in marble. On 29 August 1951, the marble cross was replaced by the current anchor.[1]

Description

The anchor is located in the centre of a slightly depressed, cobbled area. It features the monogram of Frederick VII. A lead capsule with the names of 1,600 sailors is buried under the anchor.[2]

Annual ceremony

Every year in the afternoon on Christmas Eve's Day (24 December), the Memorial Anchor is the site of a short ceremony followed by Christmas service in the nearby Sailors' Church. The tradition commenced in 1945 and was, until the mid-1990s, broadcast by DR in connection with the Radioavisen radio news programme, all the years with well-known sports commentator Gunner Nu Hansen as presenter.[2]

gollark: Anyway, I have a better solution, give all children to the government to ensure normalized raising without possibly bad parental whatever involved.
gollark: Sure they are. Both are just "government arbitrarily deciding what some people can do with each other".
gollark: I couldn't say, I've never seriously done forest (or otherwise) arson.
gollark: I mean, it would be less arbitrary by some metrics to go "nothing is a person, human life has value 0" but people don't like that.
gollark: A more arbitrary rule might be better if it lines up with moral intuitions even.

See also

References

  1. "Mindeankret". navalhistory.dk (in Danish). Archived from the original on 10 January 2011. Retrieved 23 December 2018.
  2. "Til minde om den danske sømand" (in Danish). Kristeligt Dagblad. Retrieved 23 December 2018.

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