Rungsted

Rungsted is an affluent suburban neighborhood in Hørsholm Municipality on the Øresund coast north of Copenhagen, Denmark. The center of Hørsholm is located two kilometers west of Rungsted. At the Øresund coast is Rungsted Harbour, a marina.

History

Rungsted Inn in the 1839s
Rungsted Harbour painted by Emanuel Larsen in 1847

The name Rungsted is first recorded in 1346 in the form Runæstigh. The name may be derived from Old Danish runi meaning and sti' 'svinesti', later changed to sted.[1] Alternatively the first part of the name may refer to the small waves that are characteristic of the Øresund.[2]

Rungsted's inn, Rungsted Kro, is first mentioned in the beginning of the 16th century but it is probably much older.[3] The inn moved in 1803, and the buildings were renamed Rungstedlund.

Marina

Rungsted Marina has room for approximately 800 boats. It is home to many restaurants, including a MASH steakhouse and a Sticks'n'Sushi

Sport

The neighborhood has many sports facilities and venues, and the ice hockey club Rungsted IK is housed in Rungsted Skøjtehal.

Transport

Rungsted also has a train station - Rungsted Kyst Station.

Notable residents

  • Louise Conring (1824–1891) a Danish superintendent, hospital inspector, deaconess and nurse.
  • Wilhelm Dinesen, (184595), writer, military officer, adventurer (see (Dinesen Log House) and father of Karen Blixen
  • Dagmar Hansen (1871 –1959) a Danish cabaret-singer, stage-performer and Denmark's first "pin-up girl".
  • Karen Blixen, (18851962) Danish writer, (Isak Dinesen)
  • Thomas Dinesen (18921979), Danish-Canadian military officer and Victoria Cross recipient
  • Simon Spies (1921–1984) a Danish tycoon
  • Dorete Bloch (born 1943 in Rungsted - 2015 in Tórshavn) a Danish zoologist and author of numerous books on the animals and plants of the Faroe Islands.
  • Frederik Fetterlein (1970), tennis player
  • Christoffer Boe (1974), film director

Cultural references

  • Johannes Ewald lived from March 1773 to autumn 1775 at the then Rungsted Inn, where he had some of his most productive years and wrote Rungsteds Lyksaligheder - En Ode.

Further reading

References

  1. "Rungsted" (in Danish). Gyldendal. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  2. "Historieabase". Rungsted Havn (in Danish). Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  3. "Historisk: Rungsted Kro gennem tiden". ugebladet.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 22 December 2015.

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