65 in Christianshavn Quarter in Copenhagen's first cadastre of 1689 and was at that time owned by baker Mikkel Bløcher.
Their daughter Margrethe (1719-1758) was one year after her father's death in 1741 married to the merchant and ship-owner Andreas Bjørn (1703-1750).
[3] Fridrich Mathias Schults and Ane Peders Datter, Laub's parents-in-law, resided in another apartment.
[4] Lorentz Skoud, a 54-year-old man (no occupation mentioned in the census records), resided in the third apartment with his wife Bodel Hans Datter, their two daughters (aged 17 and 20) and one lodger.
[6] Andreas Lindstrøm, an innkeeper, resided in the building with his wife Anne Kirstine Løfgreen, their two children (aged two and four), one maid and three lodgers (two sailors and a tailor).
It was at that time owned by baker Anders Schreiber,[1] The property was home to 19 residents in two households at the 1840 census.
[9] Christian Brøer Miømann, a ship carpenter, resided in the basement with his wife Louvise Christiane Mortensen, their five-year-old daughter Julie Olesine Miømann and the wife's mother Maren Mortensen.
Peter Petersen, an iron monger, resided in the basement with his wife Stine f. Johansen and their seven-year-old foster daughter Johanne Teol.
[12] Torvegade 22 is constructed on a plinth of field stone, in brick towards the street and with timber framing towards the yard, with three storeys over a walk-out basement.
The main entrance to the ground floor is topped by a keystone with a gilded relief of a crowned kringle.