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The Danish Music Museum

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The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
The Danish Music Museum
Phone:
+45 41 20 63 13

Hours:
Sunday10am - 5pm
MondayClosed
TuesdayClosed
WednesdayClosed
ThursdayClosed
FridayClosed
Saturday10am - 5pm


Danish overseas colonies and pre Dano-Norwegian colonies denotes the colonies that Denmark-Norway possessed from 1536 until 1953. At its apex the colonies spanned four continents . The period of colonial expansion marked a rise in the status and power of Danes and Norwegians in the union. Being the hegemon of Denmark-Norway or the Statsfædrelandet , Denmark is where the union's monumental palaces are now located and Copenhagen, today the capital of Denmark, was the city which both Norway and Denmark came to establish as their capital. Much of the Norwegian population moved to find work in Copenhagen, attend the University, or join the Royal Fleet. In the 17th century, following territorial losses on the Scandinavian Peninsula, Denmark-Norway began to develop colonies, forts, and trading posts in West Africa, the Caribbean, and the Indian subcontinent. After 1814, when Norway was ceded to Sweden following the Napoleonic Wars, Denmark retained what remained of Norway's great medieval colonial holdings. Christian IV first initiated the policy of expanding Denmark-Norway's overseas trade, as part of the mercantilist wave that was sweeping Europe. Denmark-Norway's first colony was established at Tranquebar on India's southern coast in 1620. Admiral Ove Gjedde led the expedition that established the colony. Today, the only remaining vestiges are two originally Norwegian colonies that are currently within the Danish Realm, the Faroe Islands and Greenland; the Faroes were a Danish county until 1948, while Greenland's colonial status ceased in 1953. They are now autonomous countries of the Kingdom of Denmark with home rule, in a relationship referred to as the Unity of the Realm.
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