Bredgade 38 is a Neoclassical property in the Frederiksstaden neighborhood of central Copenhagen, Denmark.
The present building on the site was built in 1801–02 by carpenter and master builder Andreas Hallander.
The eldest daughter Anna Alette Christine Arctander would later marry Andreas Erich Heinrich Ernst, Count von Bernstorff (1791-1834).
One of Arctander's tenants, Carl Wilhelm Jessen, a captain in the Royal Danish Navy, was among the residents of the building from 1804 to 1808.
Hans Wilhelm v. Warnstedt, who had previously served as director of the Royal Danish Theatre, resided in the building in 1812-1817.
Ferdinand Christian Fürchtegott Bauditz, a colonel, chamberlain and marshall for Prince Ferdinand, resided on the ground floor with his wife Caroline v. Bauditz, four of their children (aged 13 to 31) and two maids.
Adolph Frederik Tutein, a businessman (grosserer) and Grench vice consul, resided on the second floor with his wife Elise Vilhelmine Tutein (née Voss), their two sons (aged two and six), three maids and two lodgers.
[4] Ferdinand Bauditz (1778-1849), who had now been promoted to major-general, resided on the ground floor with his wife, four unmarried children (aged 17 to 30), two male servants and two maids.
[5] Christian Christopher and Sophie Elisabeth Zahrtmann resided on the first floor with their three daughters (aged one to 16), a male servant, a coachman, two maids and a female cook.
[6] Carl Ewald (1789-1866), the king's Adjutant general, resided on the second floor with his wife Frederikke Amalie Ewald (née Rosenstand Gorsti), three unmarried daughters (aged 19 to 32), one male servant and two maids.
[7] Andreas Felumb (1806-), a master shoemaker, resided in the basement with his wife and four children.
He prepared Denmark's first female medical doctor Nielsine Nielsen for her later studies.
Charlotte Bergstrøm and Louise Bunken, two unmarried women in their 50s, resided in the garret with two maids.