Førslevgaard is a manor house and estate located close to Fuglebjerg, Næstved Municipality, approximately 90 kilometres southwest of Copenhagen, Denmark.
The three-winged, Baroque-style main building was built for Carl Adolph von Plessen in 1726.
A number of former owners from the influential Beck family, who owned the manor from 1495 to 1659, are buried in the church.
who served as regional judge and royal treasurer for Rastern Denmark, expanded the estate with more land and tenant farms.
Lauge Beck's other holdings included Haverelykke on Lolland, Olstrup on Zealand and the royal fiefs of Roskildegaard and Ringsted Abbey.
Through his marriage, he also acquired Herlufstrup on Zealand and Vandås, Näsbyholm, Klabberup and Frenderup in Scania[4] Gørslevgaard passed out of the family when Lauge Beck's widow, Margrethe Grubbe, married Steen Hohendorff and he bought out Beck's other heirs.
He constructed a new main building, purchased more land and dissolved the remaining eight tenant farms in the village of Førslev.
He had never marriage and therefore established a fideikommis under the name "De Plessiske Fidei-Commis-Godser" and left it to his brothers' male descendents.
Shortly thereafter, Carl Adolph von Plessen chose to sell Førslevgaard to Peter Johansen Neergaard.
His eldest son Johan Wenzel Flach de Neergaard (1921-2006) became a co-owner of Førslevgaard in 1947 and its sold owner in 1964.