Timeline of Copenhagen
The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Prior to 17th century
    
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- 1167 – Absalon's Castle founded.
 - 1238 – Franciscan monastery founded.
 - 1254 – Copenhagen receives city charter.
 - 1294 – Wednesdays and Saturdays designated market days.[1]
 - 1296 – House of the Holy Ghost founded.
 - 1388 – Church of Our Lady rebuilt.
 - 1417 – Eric of Pomerania takes Copenhagen Castle.
 - 1479 
- City hall built at Gammeltorv.
 - University of Copenhagen founded.
 
 - 1493 - Govaert van Ghemen sets up printing press.[2]
 - 1583 – Dyrehavsbakken founded near Copenhagen.
 
17th century
    
- 1604 – Christian IV's Arsenal built.[3]
 - 1608 – Caritas Well built.
 - 1610
 - 1611 – Leda and the Swan statue erected.
 - 1618 – Brewery built.[3]
 - 1624 – Rosenborg Castle built.
 - 1625 – Copenhagen Stock Exchange founded.
 - 1626 – Citadel built.
 - 1634 - 5 October: Great wedding (1634) of Magdalene Sibylle of Saxony and Christian, Prince-Elect of Denmark takes place.
 - 1640 – Børsen built.
 - 1648 – Royal Danish Library founded.
 - 1659 – Assault on Copenhagen
 - 1661 – Coat of arms of Copenhagen granted.
 - 1666 – Holmens Cemetery established.
 - 1670 – Kongens Nytorv laid out.
 - 1671 – Garnisons Cemetery inaugurated.
 - 1673 – Sophie Amalienborg built.
 - 1683 – Palace built for Ulrik Frederik Gyldenløve.
 - 1686 – Thott Palace built.
 - 1695 – Church of Our Saviour built.
 
18th century
    
- 1711 – Plague.
 - 1722 - The first public theater, Lille Grønnegade Theatre, is founded.
 - 1728 
- Fire.
 - City hall rebuilt between Gammeltorv and Nytorv.
 
 - 1742 - Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters established.[4]
 - 1745 – Christiansborg Palace built.
 - 1748 – Royal Danish Theatre founded.
 - 1751 – Mastekranen built.
 - 1752 – Oeder's Garden planted.
 - 1757 – Frederiks Hospital opens.
 - 1758 – Christian's Church built.
 - 1760 
- Amalienborg Palace built.
 - Assistens Cemetery inaugurated.
 - Moses & Søn G. Melchior in business.
 
 - 1769 - Population: 82,086.(da)
 - 1770 - City directory published.[5]
 - 1771 – Royal Danish Ballet founded.
 - 1775
- Royal Porcelain Factory founded.
 - P.F. Suhm library opens.[6]
 
 - 1777 – Det Dramatiske Selskab is founded.
 - 1781 – Vestindisk Pakhus built.
 - 1785 – Heering House built.
 - 1787 – J. Cl. Todes Døtreskole, the first secondary school for girls, is founded.
 - 1791 – Døtreskolen af 1791 is founded.
 - 1793 – Royal Danish Library opened to the public.[6]
 - 1795 – Fire.
 
19th century
    
- 1801 – Battle of Copenhagen.
 - 1807 
- Battle of Copenhagen
 - Royal Commission for the Preservation of Antiquities established.[7]
 
 - 1815 – Copenhagen Court House (with city hall) built at Nytorv.
 - 1825 
- Royal Danish Academy of Music founded.
 - Kunstforeningen founded.
 
 - 1828 – Christiansborg Palace rebuilt.
 - 1829 – Church of Our Lady rebuilt.
 - 1835 - Andersen's Fairy Tales published.[8]
 - 1840 - Population: 120,819.(da)
 - 1843 
- Tivoli Gardens opens.
 - Tivoli Orchestra formed.
 
 - 1845 – Copenhagen co-host a nordic student meeting with Lund.
 - 1846 – Den højere Dannelsesanstalt for Damer is founded.
 - 1847 
- Railway station built.
 - Carlsberg brewery founded.
 
 - 1848 – Thorvaldsen Museum built.
 - 1850s – Edition Wilhelm Hansen music publisher in business.[9]
 - 1856 – Royal School of Library and Information Science founded.[6]
 - 1857 
- Folketeatret founded.
 - Charlottenborg Spring Exhibition begins.
 
 - 1859 – Copenhagen Zoo founded.
 - 1860 – City gates dismantled.
 - 1862 – Copenhagen co-host a nordic student meeting with Lund.
 - 1865 – Hansen Writing Ball typewriter invented in Copenhagen.[10]
 - 1870 
- La Glace (confectionery) in business.
 - Østre Anlæg and Vestre Cemetery established.
 - Population: 202,327.(da)
 
 - 1874 – Botanical Garden glasshouses built.
 - 1879
- Dansk Fotografisk Forening (photo society) headquartered in city.[11]
 - Vesterfælledvej truant school founded.[12]
 
 - 1881 – Children's playground constructed.[13]
 - 1882 – Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek established.
 - 1883 - Dagmarteatret (theatre) opens.
 - 1884 – Dagbladet Politiken newspaper begins publication.
 - 1890 - Population: 367,262.(da)
 - 1894 – Frederik's Church, popularly known as the "Marble Church", opens.
 - 1895 - Copenhagen Women's Exhibition
 - 1896 – Statens Museum for Kunst established.
 - 1897 
- Østerport Station opens.
 - Coast Line railway begins operating.
 
 
20th century
    
    1900s-1940s
    
- 1901
- City expands.
 - Museum of Copenhagen and International Secretariat of National Trade Union Centres[14] founded.
 - Population: 468,936.(da)
 
 - 1905 – Copenhagen City Hall built on City Hall Square.
 - 1907 – Medical Museion established.
 - 1910
- Rigshospitalet built.
 - International socialist women's conference held.[14]
 
 - 1911
- Copenhagen Central Station, Idrætsparken, and Hirschsprung Collection open.
 - Population: 584,089.(da)
 
 - 1912 – Theatre Museum in the Court Theatre founded.
 - 1913
- Dansk Statens Arkiv for Historiske Film og Stemmer (film archive) founded.[10]
 - The Little Mermaid (statue) unveiled.
 
 - 1915 - January: Conference of Socialist Parties of Neutral Countries held in Copenhagen.
 - 1917 - Munksgaards Forlag (publisher) in business.[15]
 - 1924 – Alexandra Teatret (cinema) opens.[16]
 - 1925 
- Copenhagen Airport, Kastrup and Bakkehuset museum open.
 - Danish National Symphony Orchestra founded.
 
 - 1926 – Forum Copenhagen built.
 - 1927 – Grundtvig's Church inaugurated.
 - 1928 
- Tøjhus Museum established.
 - Christiansborg Palace rebuilt.
 
 - 1929 – Søndermark Cemetery established.
 - 1938 – Palladium (Copenhagen) cinema built.[16]
 - 1940 – April: German occupation begins.[17]
 - 1945
- 5 May: German occupation ends.[17]
 - Dagbladet Information (newspaper) begins publication.
 - Population: 731,707.[17]
 
 - 1948 – David Collection opens.
 
1950s-1990s
    
- 1950 – Ryvangen Memorial Park officially inaugurated.[18]
 - 1951 - 24 September: World's first successful sex reassignment surgery performed at Gentofte Hospital.
 - 1957 – World Santa Claus Congress begins near city.[19]
 - 1958 - "Egg" and "swan" chair designs introduced.
 - 1962 – Strøget pedestrian zone laid out.
 - 1971
- Weekendavisen newspaper begins publication.[20]
 - Freetown Christiania founded.
 
 - 1973 – Roskilde Airport opens.
 - 1974 - Greater Copenhagen Council created.[21]
 - 1975 - Vester Vov Vov cinema opens.[16]
 - 1976
- Royal Danish Naval Museum established.
 - Population: 1,292,647 urban area.(da)
 
 - 1977
- 12 December: World's "first AIDS victim" dies in Copenhagen.[22]
 - Frieboeshvile restored.
 
 - 1978 – Danish Design Centre opens.
 - 1979 – Copenhagen Jazz Festival begins.
 - 1980 – Copenhagen Marathon begins.
 - 1983 – Radio Rosa begins broadcasting.
 - 1984 – Valby-Hallen opens.
 - 1986 
- Fotografisk Center and Rhythmic Music Conservatory established.
 - Worker's Museum opens.
 
 - 1992 – Parken Stadium built.
 - 1995
- Copenhagen City Bikes launched.
 - Danish Architecture Centre founded.
 
 - 1996 – National Museum of Photography and Cisternerne – Museum for moderne Glaskunst founded.
 - 1998 – Copenhagen Distortion begins.
 - 1999 – Black Diamond (library) built.
 - 2000 
- Øresund Bridge opens to Malmö, Sweden.[23]
 - Copenhagen Harbour Buses begin operating.
 
 
21st century
    
    2000s
    
- 2001 – Copenhagen Free University established.
 - 2002 – Copenhagen Metro and Copenhagen Harbour Baths inaugurated.
 - 2003 
- Copenhagen International Documentary Festival and Start! Festival begin.
 - North Atlantic House cultural centre[24] and Noma (restaurant) open.
 
 - 2004 
- Copenhagen Opera House and Danish Jewish Museum open.
 - Natural History Museum of Denmark formed.[6]
 
 - 2005 – VM Houses built.
 - 2006 – DieselHouse opens.
 - 2007
- City becomes part of the Capital Region of Denmark.
 - Karriere Bar and Geranium (restaurant) open.
 - Fictional The Killing (TV series) begins broadcasting.
 - Homeless World Cup football contest held.
 
 - 2008 
- Royal Danish Playhouse opens in Frederiksstaden.
 - 21st European Film Awards held.
 - Mountain Dwellings built.
 
 - 2009 
- United Nations Climate Change Conference held.
 - CPH:PIX film festival begins.
 
 
2010s
    
- 2010 – 8 House built.
 - 2011
- Torvehallerne (market) in business.[25]
 - MAD Symposium begins.
 
 - 2012
- Bicycle superhighway opens.[26]
 - Population: 1,213,882 urban area.(da)
 
 - 2014 - Cykelslangen (bike bridge) opens in Havneholmen.
 - 2015 – 14–15 February: 2015 Copenhagen shootings occur, killing two civilians and wounding five police officers. The suspected perpetrator was later shot and killed by police.[27]
 
2020s
    
- 2022
- 3 July: The Field's mall shooting occurs, killing multiple people.[28]
 
 
See also
    
- History of Copenhagen
 - List of lord mayors of Copenhagen
 - Copenhagen metropolitan area
 - Urban area of Copenhagen
 - Timelines of other cities in Denmark: Aarhus
 
References
    
- Karen J. Friedmann (1976). "Food Marketing in Copenhagen 1250–1850". Agricultural History. 50 (2): 400–413. JSTOR 3741339.
 - Robert Proctor (1898). "Books Printed From Types: Denmark". Index to the Early Printed Books in the British Museum. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner and Company. hdl:2027/uc1.c3450632 – via HathiTrust.
 - Susan Lewis Hammond (2005). "Italian Music and Christian IV's Urban Agenda for Copenhagen". Scandinavian Studies. 77 (3): 365–382. JSTOR 40920604.
 - James E. McClellan (1985). "Official Scientific Societies: 1600-1793". Science Reorganized: Scientific Societies in the Eighteenth Century. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-05996-1.
 -  A. V. Williams (1913). Development and Growth of City Directories. Cincinnati, USA.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Jens Thorhauge; et al. (2010), "Denmark: Libraries, Archives and Museums", in Marcia J. Bates (ed.), Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences, Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press, ISBN 9780849397127
 - Danish National Museum General Guide, Copenhagen: The Museum, 1900, OL 7080820M
 - "Timeline". Hans Christian Andersen. Online Exhibitions. British Library. 2005.
 -  Chester L. Alwes (2012). "Choral Music in the Culture of the 19th Century". In André de Quadros (ed.). Cambridge Companion to Choral Music. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-11173-7. 
Music publishers of the 18th to the early 20th c. (chronological list)
 - Steven Anzovin and Janet Podell, ed. (2000). Famous First Facts. H.W. Wilson Co. ISBN 0824209583.
 - "Continental Photographic Societies", International Annual of Anthony's Photographic Bulletin, New York: E. & H. T. Anthony & Company, 1890
 - Ning de Coninck-Smith (1992). "Copenhagen Children's Lives and the Impact of Institutions, c. 1840–1920". History Workshop (33): 57–72. JSTOR 4289139.
 - Ning de Coninck-Smith (1990). "Where Should Children Play? City Planning Seen From Knee-Height: Copenhagen 1870 to 1920". Children's Environments Quarterly. 7 (4): 54–61. JSTOR 41514760.
 - James C. Docherty; Peter Lamb (2006). "Chronology". Historical Dictionary of Socialism (2nd ed.). Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6477-1.
 - Mary H. Munroe (2004). "Blackwell Timeline". The Academic Publishing Industry: A Story of Merger and Acquisition. Archived from the original on 20 October 2014 – via Northern Illinois University.
 - "Movie Theaters in Copenhagen, Denmark". CinemaTreasures.org. Los Angeles: Cinema Treasures LLC. Retrieved 30 September 2015.
 - Webster's Geographical Dictionary, Springfield, Massachusetts: G. & C. Merriam Co., 1960, OL 5812502M
 - "Historie - Mindelunden Ryvangen" [History - Ryvangen Memorial Park] (in Danish). Ministry of Ecclesiastical Affairs. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
 - "World Santa Claus Congress". Archived from the original on 9 December 2013. Retrieved 14 December 2013.
 - "Copenhagen (Denmark) Newspapers". WorldCat. USA: Online Computer Library Center. Retrieved 7 August 2013.
 - Major Cities and Their Peripheries: Co-operation and Co-ordinated Management. Local and Regional Authorities in Europe. Council of Europe Press. 1993. ISBN 978-92-871-2394-7.
 - Patrick Robertson (2011). Robertson's Book of Firsts. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-60819-738-5.
 - "City Mayors: Danish and Swedish regions gave up power to create bi-national metropolis". City Mayors.
 - Nordatlantens Brygge. "Historical Dateline". Retrieved 15 July 2012.
 - "36 Hours in Copenhagen". New York Times. 5 October 2014.
 - S. McGrane (17 July 2012). "Copenhagen Journal: Commuters Pedal to Work on Their Very Own Superhighway". New York Times.
 -  "Chronicle of 2015", Annual Register (257 ed.), UK, 2016, ISSN 0266-6170
{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - "Several killed in Copenhagen shopping mall shooting". BBC News. 3 July 2022. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
 
This article incorporates information from the Danish Wikipedia.
Further reading
    
    
External links
    
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- Europeana. Items related to Copenhagen, various dates
 - Digital Public Library of America. Items related to Copenhagen, various dates.
 
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