Risbyholm

Risbyholm is a manor house located in Roskilde Municipality, near Havdrup, some 30 km southwest of Copenhagen, Denmark. The estate covers 528 hectares and comprises the farms Solrødgård, Ørnesæde and Klarkærgård.

Risbyholm
General information
LocationRisbyholmvej 5A,
4622 Havdrup
CountryDenmark
Coordinates55°32′48.4″N 12°5′49.36″E
Completed1723
ClientPeder Benzon

History

Risby was originally owned by the bishops of Roskilde. After the Reformation, the area came under Roskildegård.

The manor was founded as Benzonseje in 1721 when Peder Benzon, a Supreme Court justice, obtained the king's permission to merge several farms. The half-timbered main building was built the following year. In 1787, John Brown, a Scottish-born merchant and ship owner, purchased the property in auction for 60,000 Danish rigsdaler. In 1788, he sold it to his brother, David Brown, the governor of Tranquebar, who sold it again the following year. Anna Hebert, the widow after the previous owner, Christian Frederik Harald, changed the name of the property to Risbyholm in 1903.[1]

Today

The estate has a total area of 540 hectares of which 522 hectares are farmland and six hectares are woodland.

Owners

  • (1721-1737) Peder Benzon[2]
  • (1737-1755) Kirstine Catharine Leegaard, gift Schumacher
  • (1755-1775) Carl Christian Schumacher
  • (1775-1784) Nikolaj Frederik Schumacher
  • (1784-1788) John Brown
  • (1788-1789) David Brown
  • (1789-1804) Lars Larsen
  • (1804) L. Olsen
  • (1804-1829) Edvard Sneedorph Hammer
  • (1829-1834) various owners
  • (1834-1857) August Busck
  • (1857-1873) P. A. Herbert
  • (1873-1903) Christian Frederik Harald Holme
  • (1903-1917) Anna Hebert, gift Holme
  • (1917-1928) N. P. Nielsen
  • (1928-1940) Carl G. Udsen
  • (1940-1968) C. G. Udsen
  • (1968-1998) Vagn Clausen
  • (1988-2008) Claus Clausen
  • (2001-2008) Christian Clausen
  • (2008- ) Risbyholm Aps
gollark: Only with a European Parliament law authorising it.
gollark: The EU will have exactly three (3) computers for people to use.
gollark: "Unregulated computers could allow people to process data in violation of the GDPR, or train AI things without reading all 282873 pages of EU regulations, filling out forms, and ensuring they cannot be biased against anyone in any way ever."
gollark: Large areas of the world's behaviour becoming inaccessible to anyone but large bureaucratic organisations filling out horrific quantities of paperwork seems somewhat sad to me.
gollark: I mean, I don't do those things, but still.

References

  1. "Risbyholm" (in Danish). Roskildes Historie. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  2. "Ejerrække" (in Danish). Center for Herregårdsforskning. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
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