Kattrup is a manor house and estate located south of Jyderyp, Kalundborg Municipality, 90 kilometres west of Copenhagen, Denmark.
In 1444 , Sorø Abbey ceded it to the Roskilde Bishopric in exchange for other property.
[1] In 1561, Kattrup was acquired by Laurits Iversen Serlin in exchange for property elsewhere.
In 1655, Christoffer Skade's heirs' sold Katrup to Axel Juul of Volstrup.
In 1664, Kattrup was acquired by royal treasurer Henrik Müller, He would later become one of the largest landowners in the country.
Bochenhoffer was in debt to Marie Juul of Kragerupgaard and he ended up ceding the ownership of the estate to her.
He left Kattrup in the hands of his mother, Ulrika Cathrine de Mylius, after having purchased Estruplund and a number of other estates.
After Mylius' death in 1852, Kattrup was passed on to his son-in-law, Frederik Emil Herman Bernstorff.
After his death in 1930, Kattrup was passed on to his son Andreas Peter Bernstorff-Mylius.
Eiropean bison, moose, horses and wild boar will be roaming freely in the grounds.