Juellinge


Juellinge, prior to 1672 known as Valbygaard, is a manor house located on the Stevns Peninsula, Stevns Municipality, some 50 kilometres south of Copenhagen, Denmark. The Baroque-style main building and two buildings from the beginning of the 19th century have been listed on the Danish registry of protected buildings and places by the Danish Heritage Agency.

History

Valbygård

In the Middle Ages, Juellinge was called Valbygaard. The name indicates that it was then located in a village named Valby. It was a fairly insignificant manor that frequently changed hands and was rarely used as a residence by its owners. It is first mentioned in 1387 as part of the estate after Jakob Olufsen Lunge. He had been one of the most trusted advisors of Margrethe I. Jacobsen Lunge had no sons and Valbygaard was therefore passed on to his daughters Sophie and Regitze Lunge and later to their husbands Jens Andersen and Anders Nielsen Panter.
The next owner may have been Jep Knudsen, although his ownership is not confirmed until 1419. He was a member of the noble family Lille which resided on the neighbouring estate Anøje. His son, Knud Jepsen, sold Valbygaard to Johan Bjørnsen Bjørn. Valbygaard was then passed on to his son-in-law, Christoffer Lindenov. After his death, Valbygaard was sold to Elsebe Svave. In 1606, he gave it to his daughter Ellen Juel. She brought it into possession of her later husband, Jens Bille. Admiral Herluf Daa acquired the estate sometime before 1723. He died in 1630 and his widow Karen Grubbe then married Jens Bille's son Vincens Bille om 1631. He sold Valbygaard to Gunde Rosenkrantz in 1653. Rosenkrantz lived at Valbygaard with his family until 1657 but finally had to sell it due to economic problems. He fell out of favour at the court and fled to Sweden in 1664.

The Juel family

The next owner was Ida Lunge. Her daughter Vibeke Lunge inherited Valbygaard in 1671 and married Jens Juel the following year. He was one of the most influential advisors of Christian V. He changed its name into Juellinge and turned it into a barony in 1782. This meant that it could no longer be sold or divided between heirs. He also embarked on a major renovation of the buildings which culminated with the construction of a new main building in 1675.
Juel had no sons to succeed him as Baron of Juellinge and the estate was therefore passed on to his son-in-law Frederik Vind in 1700 but he died just two years later. His son, Jens Juel-Vind, was awarded the title of friherre under the name Juel-Vind in 1708.

Later history

In 1719, Juel-Vind ceded Juellinge to Frederick IV in exchange for Halsted Priory on Lolland. Holsted Priory was renamed Juellinge when the title Baron of Juellinge was restored for Juel-Vind in 1721.
The old Juellinge estate on Stevns was initially included in the new Rryggevælde Cacalry Fistrict. In 1735, Frederick IV ceded Juellinge to Frederik Danneskiold-Samsøe in exchange for another estate. In 1750, he sold it to Adam Gottlob Moltke who merged it into the countship of Bregentved. Juellinge was part of Bregentved until 1922 when the countship was dissolved as a result of lensafløsningsloven. The next owner was Christian Moltke. Later owners include A/S Premier Is, an ice cream manufacturer. The company acquired the estate in 1848.

Architecture

The Baroque-style main building stands in two-stories towards the courtyard and three stories towards the garden and was originally surrounded by moats. It is built in granite ashlars with a few chalk ashlars. The side that faces the courtyard building stands in a blank wall with smooth finishing of the ashlars and has a strongly projecting median risalit with a portal flanked by pilasters. The three other sides of the building have a more rough finishing of the ashlars and are white-washed. The well-preserved red Mansard roof is topped by three chimneys. The symmetrical floor plan is centered on a large vestibule on the ground floor. The main entrance was adapted in 1901 and the building was refurbished in 1940.
To the north of the main building is a complex of farm buildings which was originally centered on a rectangular courtyard but has seen many alterations over the years. The site also comprises two buildings from the beginning of the 19th century, one of them with exposed timber framing and two gateways, the other a brick building, and both with half-hipped red, tile roofs.
The main building and the two buildings from the beginning of the 19th century have been listed on the Danish registry of protected buildings and places by the Danish Heritage Agency.

List of owners