Hotel d’Angleterre — Copenhagen

Hotel d’Angleterre — Copenhagen
Photo: Hotel d'Angleterre, Wikimedia Commons.
Copenhagen, Denmark · 1755 · Neoclassical / Rococo

Hotel d’Angleterre — Copenhagen

Opened in 1755 on Kongens Nytorv, the d’Angleterre is the oldest luxury hotel in Scandinavia and the only Copenhagen hotel that has occupied the same square for 270 years.

At a glance

The Hotel d’Angleterre was founded in 1755 by Jean Marchal and Maria Coppy, a Swiss couple who converted their premises on Kongens Nytorv (King’s New Square) into an inn serving the fashionable quarter of Copenhagen. The square itself, laid out by Frederick III in 1680, remains the social centre of the Danish capital — the Royal Theatre, the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, and the Charlottenborg Palace all face it. The hotel has been rebuilt and extended multiple times while maintaining its continuous operation, establishing a record of longevity unmatched by any other luxury hotel in Northern Europe.

Key facts

  • Founded: 1755 by Jean Marchal and Maria Coppy on Kongens Nytorv
  • Style: Neoclassical (current facade); the oldest luxury hotel in Scandinavia
  • Address: Kongens Nytorv 34, 1050 Copenhagen, Denmark
  • GPS: 55.6761, 12.5822
  • Status: Five-star independent hotel; member of Leading Hotels of the World
  • Notable guests: Hans Christian Andersen, Charles Dickens, Michael Jackson, Winston Churchill

History

The Marchal establishment grew quickly into one of the leading addresses in Copenhagen during the late 18th century, frequented by the Danish royal court and its foreign visitors. The current building dates primarily to the 1870s reconstruction that gave the hotel its Neo-Classical facade. Throughout the 19th century the hotel hosted the leading intellectual and artistic figures of Scandinavian culture: Hans Christian Andersen was a regular guest and is said to have written in his room here on multiple visits; Charles Dickens stayed during his 1857 Scandinavian tour.

The hotel was requisitioned during the German occupation of 1940–1945 and used as offices; it was returned to its owners after liberation in 1945 and subsequently modernised. The most recent major renovation, completed in 2013 after a three-year closure, restored the historic public rooms while adding a spa and updating the 90 guest rooms. The champagne bar and the formal restaurant maintain the hotel’s position as the principal venue for formal Danish hospitality.

What you see

The current facade, in a refined Danish Neo-Classical idiom, faces Kongens Nytorv across a forecourt separated from the square by iron railings. The public interiors are divided between the formal, high-ceilinged rooms of the 1870s building and the contemporary additions of the 2013 restoration. The ballroom, with its painted ceiling and crystal chandeliers, is the reference space for formal Danish private events.

Practical information

The hotel faces the Kongens Nytorv Metro station (direct to Copenhagen Airport). Tivoli Gardens is a 15-minute walk. The hotel’s Marchal restaurant is a Michelin-starred venue. The Nyhavn canal, with its coloured townhouses, is a 3-minute walk from the hotel’s rear entrance.

Editorial text © Cultural Heritage Online, 2026.

📷 Diventa un fotografo di Cultural Heritage Online

Condividi le tue foto dei luoghi: restano pubblicate con la tua firma come autore. Più vengono viste, più ti fai conoscere — e presto un concorso premierà le foto più apprezzate.

Accedi o registrati gratis per aggiungere una foto
📋 Copy & share on social
Scroll to Top