Ny Kongensgade 6

It was listed in the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1918. Notable former residents include the politician Christian Colbjørnsen, businessman Alfred Hage, politician Orla Lehmann, landowner Michael Treschow (1814–1901) and tobacco manufacturer Emilius Nobel.

186 in the city's West Quarter (Vester Kvarter) and belonged to one Johan Jørgen at that time.

The politician Orla Lehmann, who was married to the daughter of Alfred Hage's sister, Bolette Puggaard, had his last home in the building and died there on 13 September 1870.

He resided on the ground as a widower with his daughters Caroline and Ingebrog (aged 36 and 26), his niece Laura Antonia Nobel, 42-year-old Marie Sophie Elise Marckmann, a female cook, one male servant and one maid.

[3] The city's Jewish Religious Community (Det mosaiske Troessamfund) acquired the building in 1902 and converted it into the first Danish-Jewish museum.

No. 282 seen on a detail from Christian Gedde's map of Copenhagen's West Quarter, 1757.
Drawing of the building from before 1902
Ny Kongensgade 6.
Ny Kongensgade 6.