Ziegler House, Copenhagen

Court pastry chef Johan Henrik Ziegler charged Philip de Lange with the construction of a new house on the eastern lot in 1732.

[3] The hproperty belonged to Friderich Fritz de Lilliendall at the time of the 1787 census.

[4] Another wealthy merchant, Rasmus Sternberg Selmer (1750-1833), was at the time of the 1801 census residing in the building with his wife Marie Lovise (née Gandil), their six children (aged 2–14), his mother-in-law and two maids.

Peter Rahlff (1794-1851), a German-born merchant, was residing with his wife Louise Netthropp (1800-1861), their seven children, a relative and four servants on the ground floor.

Ane Kirstine Schaufus, a widow employed with cooking for others, resided in the garret with her two children (aged 13 and 18).

Victor Petersen Bording was residing with his wige Ellen, their three children and four servants on the first floor.

[11] The painter Johan Rohde lived on the second floor with his wife Asa (née Zøylner, 1874-1960), their daughter Gabriele (1904-1946) and a maid.

Mariane Caroline Lundgaard, a 45-year-old widowed book binder, resided on the mexanine apartment with her foster daughter.

The building is designed in the Rococo style and consists of two storeys above a high cellar.

The six-bay Nybrogade wing is visually divided into two halves by a gable motif to the left.

The section to the right is dominated by a large wall dormer with a Flemish gable, featuring the inscription "F. R." and the year "1748".

The three-bay gable section to the left features a smaller wall dormer as well as sandstone decorations between the central window of the first and second storeys.

The house in an early painting
The building, depicted by
C. V. Nielsen
The property seen on a detail from Berggreen's cadastral map of Snaren's Quarter, 1884.
The building in c. 1900