Holm House

As of the 1787 census, he resided in the building with an office clerk, 14 sugar refineryworkers, a coachman, a housekeeper, a male servant and two maids.

At the time of the 1801 census, Ladiges resided in the building with the office clerk Niels Møller, a housekeeper, a maid, a female cook, a coachman and a caretaker.

[4] Jens Claus Hansen, a member of the University of Copenhagen's government body (Konsistorium), resided on the second floor with his four children (aged six to 15), a housekeeper, one male servant and one maid.

[6] Ane Chatrine Backer, a 64-year old widow and the building's concierge, was also resident in the basement with her 23-year-old daughter.

He was a professor of comparative linguistics at the University of Copenhagen from 1887 to 1913 and was awarded the Order of the Elephant in 1912 as one of few non-royal recipients in modern times.

[8] Carl Frederik Normann, a birk judge with title of justitsråd, resided on the first floor with his wife Thormine Funder, their three children (aged 19 to 23), one male servant and two maids.

the building's concierge, resided in the basement with his wife Magdalene Jensen, their three-year-old son, a lodger and a servant.

It is therefore not clear weather Holm had already acquired the building at this point or if it was not sold to him until after Rosa Eibechutz's death.

[13] Adelgunde Vogt (née Herbst, widow of the diplomat Frederik Siegfried Vogt (1777–1855) and an accomplished sculptor, resided on the first floor with two sons (aged seven and 11), her sister Thora Natalie Herbst, her niece Ophelia Gerstenborg, one male servant, three maids and a coachman.

[15] The building facing the square stands in undressed, red brick with sandstone detailing.

Inside the gateway is a Commemorative plaque that lists all the names of owners of the site since the 15th century.

No. 5 seen on a detail from Christian Gedde's map of the North Quarter, 1757.
Simon Aron Eibeschütz by N. Willumsen.
Gammeltorv 14 photographed by Peter Elfelt