Rosenborggade 7–9

The entire complex was listed in the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1975.

7 commemorates that the philosopher Søren Kierkegaard resided in the building from 1848 to 1850 and that he wrote The Sickness unto Death and Practice in Christianity while he lived there.

Other notable former residents include the actors Ludvig and Louise Phister who lived in the apartment on the second floor of No.

66 in Klædebo Quarter and owned by Regitze Grubbe (1618–1689), widow of Hans Ulrik Gyldenløve.

She did not live at the site herself, having been banished to the island of Bornholm for her complicity in the attempted murder of the Countess Parsberg in 1678.

[1] The property was owned at the time of the 1787 census by brewer Herman Hendrich Søderberg, He lived there with his second wife Johana Sophia Koefoed, their two sons (aged three and five), two brewery workers, a caretaker, a coachman and two maids.

[2] The property was home to a single household at the time of the 1801 census, consisting of merchant (høker) and brewer (bryggersvend) Peder Larsen, his wife Bente Larsen, their children Lars (aged ten) and Ane Margrethe (aged four), maid Anne Larsdatter, brewery worker Mads Jacobsen and caretaker (gårdskarl) Lars Petersen.

At the time of the 1850 census, he had resided with his family in one of the two ground floor apartments of the building at the corner of Tornebuskegade and Nørre Voldgade (No.

The elegant new complex contained rental apartments towards the street while Gram's tannery was based in the yard.

Kierkegaard wrote The Sickness unto Death and Practice in Christianity as well as substantial parts of The Point of View of My Work as an Author and The Lilies of the Field and the Birds of the Air while he lived in the building.

Frants Caspar Djørup (1813–1908), district physician in Copenhagen, resided in another apartment with his wife Augusta Adolphine Djørup née Oxenbøll, their two youngest children Lauritz and Ane (aged three and one), their female cook and a nanny.

Augusta Adolphine Djørup née Oxenbøll was the maternal aunt of the writer Henrik Pontoppidan.

Stine Smith and Maria Jensdatter, two women in their 20s, resided on the ground floor.

Hanne Jacobine Holm née From, a 51-year-old divorced woman, a rare phenomenon at the time, resided with her 31-year-old unmarried daughter and a maid on the first floor.

Søren Pedersen Lybye (1825–1898), a farmer from western Jutland and an MP,[9] resided in the apartment on the first floor when he was in Copenhagen.

Her son Jacob Nielsen (1841–1894) would later establish one of the largest book printing businesses in the country.

[11] The residents included Johan Nicolay Lange (1814–1865), a minister associated with Almindelig Hospital and Abel Cathrines Stiftelse.

The ground floor of the building is below a white, plastered belt course rendered in a brown colour with sandstone framing around the windows.

Regitze Grubbe by Karel van Mander III at the Frederiksborg National Museum
No. 64 seen in a detail from Gedde's map of Klædebo Quarter, 1757
A caricature; the figure is standing facing left, with a top-hat, cane, formal attire. The caricature is over-emphasizing his back, by making him appear as a hunchback.
Søren Kierkegaard
Ludvig Phister
The property seen on one of Berggreen's block plans of Klædebo Quarter, 1886-88