Sankt Annæ Plads 11

It was built in 1801 to design by city architect Jørgen Henrich Rawert and was listed on the Danish Registry of Protected Buildings and Places in 1918.

Sankt Annæ Plads 11 was built in 1801 by city builder Jørgen Henrich Rawert for his own use.

[1] He had already built the property at Sankt Annæ Plads 5 a few years earlier and had lived there until 1797 when he moved to an apartment at Borgergade 25.

He had completed the more extravagant Erichsen Mansion on Kongens Nytorv in 1801 but had to move after he went bankrupt during the economic crisis that followed the war with England.

Carl Adolph Rothe, a counter admiral, resided on the ground floor with his wife Benedichte, their seven children (aged 10 to 23), two male servants and two maids.

[3] Haagen Mathiesen, a Norwegian businessman and ship-owner, resided on the first floor with his "housekeeper" and de facto spouse Anne Bue (1783–1853) and two of their four children.

Another daughter, Julie, lived there with her husband Isaac Pierre Larpent (a medical doctor) and their two children (aged one and two).

Carl Moltke, director of Rentekammeret, resided in the third apartment with his wife Anne Malvine Moltke (née Simons), their three children (aged seven to 15), the tutor Ernst Ludvig Goske, a governess, a nanny, a female cook, two male servants and two maids.

[8] The building was before 1845 acquired by Joseph Carl, Count Reventlow Criminil, president of the Slesvig Holsteen-Lauenborgske Canvellie, who by then resided in one of the apartments with his wife Charlotte (née Grevinde Platen Hallermund), 43-year-old Baronesse Adeline Blome and a staff of 10 people.

Ancker Wilhelm Frederik von Bornemann, a retired Supreme Court justice, resided in another apartment with his wife Harriet (née Parsons), a housekeeper, a female cook, a maid, a male servant and a caretaker.

Peter Petersen, a royal lackey and tavernkeeper, resided in the building with his wife Johanne Giertrud Hansen, their two children (aged 4) and two lodgers.

Rasmus Mathiesen Arreboe Hansen, a shoemaker and the building's concierge, resided in the basement with his wife Susanne Anna (née Forbach).

Jørgen Henrich Rawert
Haagen Mathiesen
Carl Moltke's living room.
No. 11 on an old photo