Tutein House

The building was adaptedand extended in 1881 by Reinholdt W. Jorck [da] for whom Horcks Passage on the other side of the street would later also be constructed.

Andreas Wulff, a needle maker, resided in the building with his wife Mette Stierne, seven children from his first marriage (aged eight to 20), two employees, three male servants (musqueteers) and one maid.

[2] Hinrich Johannes Krebs, a professor of mathematics, resided in the building with his wife Christina Sophia von Bracht, their five children (aged three to 14), one male servant, one female cook, two maids and the lodger Carl Friderich Hemsen (son of former governor of the Danish Gold Coast Johan Conrad von Hemsen).

[3] Detleff Mauritzen, a cook in the king's kitchen, resided in the building with his wife Ellen Larsenm their five children (aged one to 11) and one maid.

[4] Lars Christensen, a grocer (høker), resided in the basement with his wife Maria Christine, their three children (aged one to six) and one maid.

Niels Ahrensberg, a collector at Tal-Lotteriet, resided in the building with his wife Cathrine Lise Nickelman, their five children (aged two to 16), a female cook and a maid.

[6] Ludevig Wittrog, a supercargo in the service of the Danish Asiatic Company, resided in the building with his wife Henriette Magdalena Rossow, their three children (aged 11 to 21) and one maid.

He resided in the building with his wife Magdalena Friderica Zumpe, their son Martin Drewsen, the wife's sister Elisabet Margretha Zumpe, his nephew Jørgen Christopher Drewsen (assessor at the Supreme Court), an employee in his wine business, three apprentices, a coachman, a caretaker, one male servant, two maids and a female cook.

The present building on the site was constructed by Johan Martin Quist for Friederich Tutein in 1800–01.

It comprised one of the largest trading houses in the city, a calico factory at Sortedam Lake and interests in a sugar refinery.

[12] In around 1810 the house was also the home of Tutein's wealthy son-in-law, Johann Jacob Frölich, who until then had lived at Lille Strandstræde 20.

Tutein was appointed to Prussian consul general in 1808 but gave up the office at the outbreak of the First Schleswig War.

The daughter Pouline Wilhelmine Vilhelmine Tutein married to wholesale merchant Johan Jacob Frölich.

Frederik Tutein resided in the building with his wife Sophie Tutein (née Wraatz), the lady's compansion Sophie Palme, husjomfru Louise Weygaard, two male servants, two maids, a female cook, a coachman, a caretaker and a concierge.

[15] Ane Dorothea Wendt, a widow clothing retailer, resided in the basement with her 18-year-old son Carl Chr.

their daughter Josepha Anna Maria Tutein, a housekeeper, husjomfru Emma Louise Marie Adolphensen, a maid, a female cook, ywp male servants, a coachman and a concierge.

In October 1881, the pastry-baker and wine merchant D. B. Schucani (from Ftan in Graubünden) moved his café from the ground floor of nearby Vimmelskaftet 43 to these new mezzanine with one room with windows to Vimmelskaftet where newspapers were displayed and another with windows to Badstuestræde.

[19] His countrymen and olleagues Mini and à Porta from Kongens Nytorv provided a deposit for his investment.

In the inner room with four marble tables and four plush green sofas, almost all of Copenhagen's radical literary elite met, only a few older than thirty.

Georg Brandes, Gustav Wied, Agnes Henningsen, Peter Nansen, in the winter of 1893 Knut Hamsun at the same time as Johannes Jørgensen, and also the very young Johannes V. Jensen frequented the only real literary coffee house in the city: Bernina.

[20] In 1906 the management was again taken over by a Swiss from Kongens Nytorv, Gaudenz Gianelli the Younger, who was married to a Danish woman and had been trained by his father.

The latter was qvist's take on the chamfered corner which was dictated for all corner buildings by Jørgen Henrich Rawert's and Peter Meyn's guidelines for the rebuilding of the city after the Great Fire of 1795so that the fire department's long ladder companies could navigate the streets more easily.

No. 156–18 and No. 84 seen on a detail from Christian Gedde's map of Snaren's Quarter, 1757.
Carl Thomsen : Weyse in the Tutein home
The Tutien Gouse seen on a drawing by H.G.F. Holm , c. 1840.
The Tutein House at Vimmelskaftet 47
The KTAS central office.
Café Bernina.
Café Bernina in c. 1900.