Here where you stand in the middle of Copenhagen you can enjoy one of Denmark's oldest parks and castles - Rosenborg Castle.
This beautiful oasis gathers the city's families with children, students, couples and not the city's guests seek peace and enjoy the beautiful and peaceful park. The King's Garden in Copenhagen is one of the country's oldest royal gardens.
The Royal Garden was laid out on the initiative of King Christian the 4th around 1606 as a utility garden that supplied the court with fruit and vegetables. Previously, only the royals and nobles had access to the park, but King Christian the 7th's life doctor, J. F. Struensee, got the king to open the park to the public. Two years later, the king's life doctor was arrested and convicted of overthrowing the king and having an intimate affair with Queen Caroline Mathilde. It has been made into a novel, play, royal ballet and film.
The garden has been open to the public since the 1770s and is today a popular breathing space in the center of Copenhagen, which is visited by approximately three million people every year. Inside Kongehaven you can see and visit Rosenborg Castle, which is a castle in the center of Copenhagen.
Music channel
Christian IV was a bit of a visionary when it came to creative inventions, and Vinterstuen hid several secrets that he enjoyed surprising his noble and royal guests with. In the floor, for example, there were three discrete sound channels through which sweet music could reach the king's guests without them being able to locate the sound source. Something that at the time has been both a scary and fascinating experience!
The sound channels were hidden for several centuries and only when the castle was restored in 2005 did they reappear.
It is believed that Christian IV, when he expanded Rosenborg in 1613-15, was provided with his new Winter Room with the secret sound channels in the floor, so that the royal chapel could unseen make music under the vaults in the basement.
A couple of times a year, the Violin Band performs with concerts in the Winter Room, where the music channels are demonstrated to the public.
In other words, one can call the king's secret built - in the music channels for the renaissance's response to today's Sonos or Bang and Olufusen sound systems.