Kragerup, also known as Kragerupgaard, is a manor house and estate located close to Høng, Kalundborg Municipality, some 90 kilometres southwest of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Towards the end of the 15th century, Oluf Mortensen Gyrsting had acquired almost full ownership of the estate.
After his death in 1490, Kragerup was passed first to Eggert Andersen Ulfeldt (died 1505) and then to Peder Skram.
After Lunge's death, Kragerup was passed to his grandson, Eggert Clausen Ulfedt,.
[1] Elisabeth Ylfeldt (née Galde) brought Kragerup into her second marriage with Jørgen Friis til Knastrup.
[3] Frius' widow Barbara Wittrup jept the estate after her husband's death.
After his death in 1721, Kragerup was sold by auction for 25, 000 Danish rigsdaler to regiment quartermaster Andreas Fogh (died 1762).
[1] In 1801, Kragerup was acquired by Jens Kraft Dinesen, who had sold Gyldenholm to Christopher Schøller Bülow the previous year.
Their son Jens Kraft Jacob Sophus Dinesen then inherited the estate.
Her son by her first husband, also called Jens Kraft Dinesen, inherited Kragerup in 1910.
The main building is a three-winged, two-storey complex with white-washed walls and a half-hipped red tile roof.
[5] An octagonal table for board games executed in granite for Eggert Ylfeldt in 1577 has survived to the present day.