The long reign of King Christian IV
(1577-1648) was a turbulent period. At
the start of his rule Denmark, forming a
unity with Norway, enjoyed great
prosperity. By the end his irrepressible
urge for military expansion left his
people impoverished. In the early
seventeenth century Denmark was
recognised as the dominant Baltic power,
but by the end of his reign this role
was gradually taken over by Sweden.
During the Thirty-Year War Denmark had
to surrender part of Norway to Sweden
and was reduced to a second-rate power.
In the mid-seventeenth century Sweden’s
era was just beginning. The first decade
of Christian’s rule was marked by a
flurry of palace construction. Between
1596-1600 the king had tennis courts
erected at five of his favourite
castles: Kronborg, Koldinghus,
Frederiksborg, Copenhagen and
Skanderborg. Two buildings are still
recognisable as former tennis courts:
the Teahouse at Frederiksborg Castle and
the library at Soro Academy.
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Frederiksborg Slot |
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On 6 September
Christian commissioned the Danish
architect Christian Bernekow with
the building of a boldhuset
at Kronborg castle in Elsinor (Helsingor).
This castle was used by Shakespeare
as the setting of his Hamlet.
The construction of the tennis court
was obviously completed by 18 March
1597, because on this date Bernekow
was to proceed with his building
activities for another royal tennis
court: at Koldinghus castle.
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Kronborg Slot |
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Koldinghus castle’s tennis
court was built at the same
time as Christian’s
boldhuset at Kronborg.
It appears that the
construction of this court
had to be temporarily
postponed when the castle
partly burnt down in 1597. A
record of 1610 shows that
tennis was played at this
court in 1610. Koldinghus
castle went up in flames in
1808, during a siege by
Napoleon Bonaparte. We do
not know if Napoleon, a keen
convert of tennis, was also
to be blamed for the
destruction of the royal
tennis court.
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The
commission to build the
Frederiksborg tennis
court was registered in
the royal accounts (Kancelliets
Brevboger) on the
same day, 18 March 1597,
as the boldhuset
at Kronborg. It clearly
reflects Christian’s
great passion for the
game. Again Christian
Bernikow (or Bernekow)
was involved in the
construction of this
court, which was linked
to the stables. Major
refurbishment of the
court was undertaken in
the years 1639-1640.
Used as a garden house
in the 19th
century, and at present
as the Castle’s Teahouse
(see photo)
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Castle's
Teahouse |
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A third royal tennis court was
commissioned on 18 March 1597, the
“kongelige boldhus” at Copenhagen’s
castle in the Slotsholmen area. Bernikow
was obviously too much involed in other
royal tennis court constructions,
because the accounts identify Jorgen
Friborg as the project’s architect. A
plan of Copenhagen castle shows the
tennis court at the bottom of the
drawing, situated just outside the
castle moat. Ole Worm, in his study
includes a range of references to
Copenhagen’s royal tennis court. The
building appears to have been extended
in the early seventeenth century to
cater for the increasing number of
racket players, necessitating a larger
court.
King Frederik IV had a new tennis court
built during his reign (c. 1720?). The
boldhus can be seen in the view
Jan Dirksen made of Copenhagen castle in
1728. The Boldhusstraede in Copenhagen
bears witness to the site of the tennis
court in the seventeenth and eighteenth
century. Copenhagen castle was
demolished in the 1720s, King Christian
VI had a new palace built virtually on
the same site on Slotsholmen in 1731,
called Christiansborg.
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On 26 February 1600 Chistian IV
commissioned the construction of his
fifth tennis court, at Skanderborg
castle. It is recorded in an inventory
of 1608 and according to the royal
accounts for the castle, new bricks were
used for the refurbishment of the tennis
court. At present nothing remains of the
castle.
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Soro Kloster was transformed into the
Danish Knight’s Academy (dansk
ridderakademi) in 1623 on the
instigation of Christian IV. The Academy
was founded to educate his sons and to
provide suitable education for young
noblemen. The academy’s tennis court was
built in about 1628, modelled on the
royal Kronborg boldhus.
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Soro
Akademi Library (on the
right), which was a tennis
court |
The tennis court can be seen in Pa
Resens’s Atlas Danicus of 1677.
The building appears to be the only
seventeenth century tennis court that
has survived. The original boldhus
now serves as the Soro Academy’s Library
(see photo). The building has retained
the characteristic rectangular shape of
a tennis court (measurements c. 32 x 11
metres, 51 x 17.5 alen). Soro
Academy employed a keeper of the tennis
court (boldmester) for an annual
salary of 60 Rdl.
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After Christian’s death in 1647 his
successor King Frederik III had another
tennis court built. There is a record of
his boldhus constructed at
Rosenborg castle, near the castle’s
moat, in 1660.
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Copenhagen can pride itself of a tennis
court theatre, the Boldhus Teatret.
It is located not far from
Christiansborg castle which was built
under King Christian VI in about 1730.
It is not clear if the theatre was once
a royal tennis court linked to this
castle. The court underwent a major
transformation to serve as a theatre.
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Source: Ole Worm, ‘Boldhuse i
Danemark’, Idraetshistorisk Arborg 1991 (VII,
Odense University), pp. 34-47
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