Bavelse

In a surviving document, written in Latin, from 1583, she transferred the estate to her son Henneke Johan Moltke.

[2] In 1562, Anne Jacobsdatter Flemming was married to Jacob Ulfeldt who inherited, in 1566, the estates Kongsbølle (later Ulfeldtsholm) on Funen and Selsø in Hornsherred.

He is remembered for his very troubled diplomatic journey into Russia in 1578, during which he concluded a treaty with Tsar Ivan IV (1530–1584), that brought him to disgrace at home.

On his return to Denmark, he was thrown out of the privy council and lost all his royal fiefs.

In 1724, he was appointed as district judge (landsdommer) of Zealand and was at the same time granted Ringsted Abbey as a fief.

The main building had fallen into a state of disrepair and 12 of the farms in the village had been burnt or were left empty.

In 1709 and 1710, Næsbyholm and nearby Bavelse were acquired by Frederik IV for his mistress, Charlotte Helene von Schindel, who was given the title Countess of Frederiksholm.

She initially stopped at Fyn and claimed to be pregnant with Frederick's child, but the pregnancy turned out to be false.

Charlotte Helene von Schindel hosted a vivid social life at her estate and entered into a relationship with the noble Ernst G. Bülow, with whom she had a child.

[2] In 1645, Næsbyholm and Bavelse were acquired by Johan Ludvig Holstein and incorporated in the countship of Ledreborg.

In 1775, Johan Ludvig Holstein sold Næsbyholm and Bavelse to Carl Adolph Raben.

To facilitate transportation of timber from his forest at Næsbyholm, he canalized the Suså River from Bavelse to Næstved.

Danneskiold-Samsøe was, however, hit hard by the agricultural crisis that followed the war with England and the national bankruptcy of 1813.

He had made a fortune as a wholesale merchant and sugar manufacturer in Copenhagen as well as on speculative investments during the war years.

He had no children and therefore left his estates to his sister's grandson, Peter Christian Howden (1854–1930), who assumed the last name Howden-Rønnenkamp.

[6] The plastered, Neoclassical house consists of a two-storey Corps de logis with a half-hipped black slate roof, flanked by two one-storey secondary service wings.

Ledgerstone of Evert Thott and his wife Margrethe Bølle.
Ulfeldt's new main building, 1588
Christian Sigfred von Plessen
Painting of Bavelse in the middle of the 19th century.