The island of Sprogø lies in the Great Belt c. 8.5 kilometers from the shores of the town of Nyborg.
Harbours between Kerteminde, Svendborg and Slipshavn were also outlawed, and Nyborg was given permission to arrange a large yearly market.
It also included ten birks: Hindsholm, Holckenhavn, Ravnholt, Glorup, Hesselager, Brahetrolleborg, Holstenshuus, Vantinge, Avernakø and Strynø.
[15] The area around Nyborg's main hall is a pedestrian zone, containing a big variety of shops and facilities.
At the motorway exit is also an indoor public swimming pool and a sports- and recreation center.
A series of hotels are located along the north-eastern shore of the city, facing the Great Belt Strait.
A chapel was built on the cemetery in 1605, but torn down again sixty years later in 1665 when the fortifications of Nyborg city were being expanded.
[21] Aunslev, north-west of Nyborg, has been the location of several significant Viking-related archeological discoveries, including a piece of jewellery in gold, in the shape of Jesus.
These are all the settlements with populations of less than 200 people:[25] The municipality is home to many nature areas, namely forests, bogs, meadows and coast.
There are three small protected nature areas within the city of Nyborg, including a series of old linden trees and an open meadow.
[32] Knudshoved, along with Slipshavn, make up a peninsula that creates a natural harbour in Nyborg Fjord.
It consists of forests, beach meadows, reed beds, water holes and the lake of Østerø Sø.
[33] In the Stone Age, the area of Knudshoved was shallow ocean, but has over time been transformed into the modern-day peninsula with beach meadows and lakes.
The population of Flødstrup Parish voted on 30 March 2005 to decide whether to join Nyborg or Kerteminde Municipality.
The most well-known of these is known as Den med Fisken (English: The One with the Fish) by Harvey Martin, located next to the moat on Østerhavn.
The castle owns 900 acres, and perform forestry, farming, hunting and renting out of residential houses.
He, however, was secretary at the Danish chancery, and the day-to-day management of the manor was instead performed by his mother, Anne Eriksdatter Hardenberg.
Jacob Ulfeldt fought under both Herluf Trolle and Daniel Rantzau in the Seven Years' War.
This upset the king, and Jacob Ulfedt spent the rest of his days taking care of Holcekhavn Castle.
After the war, Corfitz Ulfeldt escaped to Germany to avoid the charges for treason, while Leonora Christine was imprisoned.
The war had taken its economical toll on the manor though, and it wasn't until 1760 that the owner Erik Rosenkrantz Holck managed to turn this around.
[85] The castle was temporarily owned by Margaret I, who gave it away to Henneke Olufsen Bjørn a few days after acquiring it.
Christen Thomesen Sehested acquired the castle in 1640, and began significant plans to expand the manor.
After Sehested's death and the abolishment of absolute monarchy in Denmark, the manor ran into debt and were in financial trouble until 1730 when it was bought by Theodor Adeler, who turned things around.
Anne Cathrine Bendtz got control of the manor in 1778, and she made significant changes to it, selling the parts they didn't need while also establishing new plantations and constructing new buildings.
The market was helt the 2nd Saturday in July in Ørbæk every year until 1957, where the industrialization meant that horses were no longer necessary.
Sports represented in these organizations include fitness, badminton, handball, kayaking, bowling, rowing, tennis, diving, athletics, gymnastics, swimming, triathlon, petanque and volleyball.
[94] In the northern part of Nyborg is also the Skovpark Hall (Danish: Skovparkhallen), housing facilities for badminton, handball, volleyball and basketball.
Fishery is popular, with locations around Slipshavn and central Nyborg acting as attractive fishing spots.
The king's head represents Erik Klipping, who signed the first Danish constitution at the Danehof in Nyborg Castle.