Nordfeld

Nordfeld
The main building seen o a vintage postcard
General information
Architectural style Gothic Revival
Location Møn
Country Denmark
Coordinates 55°1′14″N 12°23′40″E / 55.02056°N 12.39444°E / 55.02056; 12.39444Coordinates: 55°1′14″N 12°23′40″E / 55.02056°N 12.39444°E / 55.02056; 12.39444
Completed 1774(first main building)
1876 (current main building)
Client Otto Danneskjold-Samsøe
Design and construction
Architect Frederik Wilsbech (current main building)

Nordfeld is a manor house on the island of Møn in southeastern Denmark. The estate was created in 1774 but the current, Neo-Gothica main building is from 1876.

History

Jørgen Wichfeld

The entire island of Møn was up until the second half of the 18th century crown land. Nordfeld is one of many manor houses in eastern Denmark that was created when Frederick V and later Christian VII began to sell off crown land as part of the agricultural reforms of the time. The intension was to sell the land to the local tenant farmers but count Holck and Thygesen who were put in charge of the sale were opposed to the reforms. They divided Møn into five large estates which were sold in auctuin in 1770. The local farmers showed up in large numbers at the auction to buy the entire island but only managed to buy three of the estates due to a requirement that guarantees for the payment should be provided the following morning at 10 am at the latest. Nordfeld was therefore not sold until a new auction was held in March 1774. After Johan Friedrich Struense's progressive government had been replaced by a more conservative one, it was no longer possible for farmers to buy manors and Nordfeld was instead acquired by Jørgen Wichfeld. He immediately constructed a new manor house on the land.[1]

The new main building from 1786

In 1787, Wichfeld sold Nordfeld to Peder Sølling. He sold many of the farms to the tenant farmers before selling Nordfeld to Christopher Schøller Bülow in 1806. He eas already the owner of several other manors and had embarked on a promising career as civil servant but experienced economic difficulties during the agricultural crisis of the 1810s and went bankrupt in 1820. He fled the country after being indicted for embezzlement with public funds and was sentenced to prison in 1821. Nordfeld was sold to Christian Conrad, Count of Danneskiold-Samsøe. In 1823, he passed it on to his youngest son, Otto Danneskiold-Samsøe, who was director of the Royal Danish Mail Services. He constructed a new main building.

After Otto Danneskiold-Samsøe's death in 1894, Nordfeld was passed on to his son Christian Conrad Sophus Danneskiold-Samsøe wgo became known as the "theatre count" after being appointed to director of the Royal Danish Theatre later that samee year. After his death in 1908, Nordfeld was passed on first to his widow Wanda Danneskiold-Samsøe and then his son Viggo Danneskiold-Samsøe who became the last member of the family to own the estate.

Architecture

The current main building was built by Frederik Wilsbech for Otto Danneskjold-Samsøe in 177476. It is a one-storey red brick building in Gothic Revival style with Crow-stepped gables.[2] On each side of the building is a three-bay central projection tipped by a Crow-stepped gable. The central projection on the front side contains the main entrance while the one on the rear side features as large ceranda overlooking the garden. The central projection is flanked by two crow-stepped gable dormers on both sides of the building.[3]

Ro the south of the main building is a complex of farm buildings (Avlsgården=. It consists of four one-storey buildings in red brick with details in yellow brick and red-painted timber, arched windows and tin roofs.

Forvalterboligen (the manager's house) is a one-storey red brick building on a stone foundation. It has a red tile roof with three chimneys. .

The stables (Herskabsstalden) is also a one-storey brick building. It has a slate roof. A tall gabled dormer opens to the jayloft. A brick cornice runs below the roof.

A total of 11 individual buildings have been listed. They include the main building, the four-winged complex of farm buildings, the farm manager's house with Herskabsstalden and an outbuilding and the gardener's house with another outbuilding.[4]

Today

Nordfeld is today owned by Jens Krarup Haubroe. The estate convers a total area of 1,151 hectares. It comprises the farm Klosterskovgård as well as the woodlands Elmelunde Kohave and Ridefogedlukke.

List of owners

References

  1. "Nordfeld". danskeherregaarde.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  2. "Nordfeld - bygninger". danskeherregaarde.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  3. "Nordfelt". roskildehistorie.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  4. "Sag: Nordfeld". Kulturstyrelsen (in Danish). Retrieved 13 August 2017.
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