|
Main
News Index
Kronborg
is the motif on the first plate in the series of Danish Castles
& Palaces.
The motif, which shows swans in the foreground and the imposing
bulk of Kronborg in the background, is the work of artist Jørgen
Nielsen.
Kronborg Slot is one of Northern Europes most important
renaissance castles and is linked in many peoples minds
with William Shakespeares play about Hamlet, Prince of
Denmark. But Hamlet never existed in the real world only
in Shakespeares imagination. Nonetheless, his Tragical
History of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark has helped put Helsingør
or Elsinore on the literary map of the world,
and every year the play is performed on stages around the globe
with Kronborg as the setting, of course.
Hamlet is not the only figure linked with Kronborg, however.
Holger Danske is a permanent fixture in the Casemates, where
he sits contemplating the state of the kingdom, ready to awaken
if an enemy threatens Denmark. He is a national hero for the
Danes, but his legend actually originated in a French tale,
which simply travelled up through Europe and found its way to
Helsingør, where it was translated and retold in 1534,
with the result that it became inextricably linked with Kronborg.
So it is an old castle with amazing tales to tell that features
on the first Castles & Palaces plate, and Hans Christian
Andersen was one of the many people to be inspired by the legend
of Holger Danske, writing a fairy tale of the same name in 1845.
In 2000 Kronborg was inscribed on UNESCOs World Heritage
List and has now also been immortalised on a plate from Royal
Copenhagen, of course. Next years motif will be Eremitagen,
a beautiful baroque palace built in Jægersborg Deer Park
as King Christian VIs hunting lodge.
Visit the WCN Royal Copenhagen
information pages and message boards.
For more details visit the Royal
Copenhagen web site.
|