Rosendal is a manor house and estate located 3.5 km south of Faxe in southeastern Denmark.
The two-storey main wing is from 1849 and was designed by Michael Gottlieb Bindesbøll but some of the other buildings date from the 17th century.
The estate was originally called Totterupholm and was created when Ide Munk, the widow of Oluf Rosenkrantz, merged the farms in the village of Totterup into a single manor circa 1560.
She had been married first to Steen Rosensparre and then to Peder Oxe but had become a widow for the second time with her second husband's death in 1575.
Rosenkrantz managed Rosenlund with great skill and increased the quarrying of limestone at Faxe.
He had also granted him permission to sell Rosenlund on condition that he would create a fideikommis for future generations of the family.
Iver Rosenkrantz sold Rosenlund to Haagen Christian Astrup in 1788 on the condition that its name would be changed back to Totterupholm.
In 1801, Astrup sold Rosendal to Lauridz Moss Hofgaard and Carl Adolph Stampe.
He left Rosendal to his nephew, Helge Ernest Knuth, who had already managed it for his uncle for some time.
The main building is flanked by two one-storey, half-timbered side wings with red tile roofs that date from the 17th century.