Yellow Palace, Copenhagen

Today the building is owned by the Danish Palaces and Properties Agency and houses the Lord Chamberlain's Office.

They resided in the building with their five-year-old daughter Ana Maria Elisabet, a coachman, a male servant and two maids aty the time of the 1787 census.

King Frederick VI purchased the mansion in 1810 to use it as a guest residence for relatives visiting the royal family.

In 1837, King Frederick VI handed the property over to his wife's nephew Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg who had just arrived in Copenhagen from Germany.

Later, his youngest son Prince Valdemar lived in the Yellow Palace with his family until his death in 1939 as its last royal resident.

[4] The site also includes Garderstalden (English: Guard's Stable), which was built in 1842 to designs by Jørgen Hansen Koch.

The Yellow Palace, early 19th-century.
Amaliegade and the Yellow Palace in 1830
The building in the 1870s
Prince Valdemar's living room, 1890