Marienborg Manor

[1] In 1668, Frederik III gave Captain Jacob Nielsen several estates on Møn, including the Nygård[2] farm, as a reward for his having captured a Swedish ship and brought it back to Copenhagen with its cargo and Danish prisoners of war.

In 1739–47, Count Adam Gottlob Moltke resided on the estate but handed it over to the new governor, Frederik Christian von Møsting, against a payment of 6,000 rigsdaler for the building.

Shortly afterwards, Beringskjold took the property over himself, naming it Marienborg after his wife Marie Kirstine von Cappelen.

[4] On Antoine's death in 1781, his son Charles Bosc de la Calmette inherited the estate.

[3] Marienborg now consists of a farming and forestry estate in West Møn, specializing in pig rearing.