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February2008
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Sooner or Later, It’s Copenhagen

The capital of Denmark and the birthplace of physicist and Nobel laureate Niels Bohr, comedian Victor Borge and Georg Jensen’s silversmithy was once described as the “goal of my desires” by noted children’s author Hans Christian Andersen. The Library’s Rare Book and Special Collections Division is the home of the Jean Hersholt Collection of Hans Christian Andersen, which is the largest collection of Anderseniana outside of Denmark. Included are manuscripts, letters, first editions, presentation copies and other related materials, such as Andersen’s annotated transcript of his autobiography “My Life’s Fairy Tale” and a digitized copy of “Stories from Hans Christian Andersen.”

General view of Copenhagen, Denmark. ca. 1890 – 1900 Hans Christian Andersen, 1805-1875; full, standing, with coat and hat, facing left

The Library’s Danish collections extend to many other divisions. More than 2,000 retrospective or current newspapers, magazines, journals, bulletins, annuals and other serials from or about Denmark can be found in the Newspaper and Current Periodical Reading Room. The Manuscript Division has the papers of John Murray Forbes from his says as the American consul residing at Copenhagen and Hamburg during the years 1801-19, and Norman Hapgood's papers from when he served as United States minister to Denmark in 1919. The Geography and Maps Division provides access to thousands of maps pertaining to Denmark, including reproductions of the earliest map of Scandinavia, drawn by Danish mapmaker Claudius Clavus in 1427. For a complete listing, the European Division offers a general overview to all the Library’s Danish materials.

In celebration of Andersen’s 200th birthday in 2005, the Library hosted a lecture by scholar Niels Ingwersen. The article about the event can be found in the June/July/August 2005 issue of the Library of Congress Information Bulletin. The magazine is distributed free of charge domestically and overseas to members of Congress; public, academic and research institutions; learned societies and allied organizations; and to the more than 1,000 depository libraries in the United States. Its mission is to report on the policies, programs and events of the Library.


A. General view of Copenhagen, Denmark. ca. 1890 – 1900. Prints and Photographs Division. Reproduction Information: Reproduction No.: LC-DIG-ppmsc-05746 (digital file from original); Call No.: LOT 13421, no. 001 [item] [P&P]

B. Hans Christian Andersen, 1805-1875; full, standing, with coat and hat, facing left. Rare Book and Special Collections Division. Reproduction Information: Reproduction No.: LC-USZ62-43572 (b&w film copy neg.); Call No.: Illus. in Rare Book Coll. [Rare Book RR]