2 Best Sights in Zealand, Denmark

Carmelite Kloster

Close to Sankt Olai Kirke stands Sankt Marie Kirke. Its 15th-century Carmelite Kloster is one of the best-preserved examples of medieval architecture in Scandinavia.

Skt. Annæ Gade 38, Helsingør, Capital Region, 3000, Denmark
49-21–17–74
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Free; tour costs DKr 20, Mid-May–mid-Sept., daily 10–3; tour at 2 mid-June–mid-Sept. Mid-Sept.–mid-June, daily 10–2; no fixed tour time

Roskilde Domkirke

Construction began on Roskilde Domkirke around 1170 on the site of a church erected 200 years earlier by the Viking hero Harald Bluetooth. It was made possible by the introduction of brick making to Denmark—it is made up of more than 3 million bricks—and a commission by the powerful Bishop Absalon, who's also considered one of the founders of Copenhagen. The cathedral made the city one of the spiritual capitals of Northern Europe. These days, its best known as the mausoleum of the royals: 38 Danish monarchs are entombed here, including the first Queen Margrethe (1353–1412), and there's reason to believe that Queen Margrethe II will ultimately find her resting place in or near the cathedral, like her father, Frederik IX. Don't miss the 16th-century clock depicting St. George charging a dragon, whose hisses and howls throughout church cause Peter Døver, "the Deafener," to sound the hour. A squeamish Kirsten Kiemer, "the Chimer," shakes her head in fright but manages to strike the quarter-hours.