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Dragør

Coordinates: 55°35′N 12°40′E / 55.583°N 12.667°E / 55.583; 12.667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dragør
Dragør Strandhotel
Dragør Strandhotel
Dragør is located in Denmark
Dragør
Dragør
Location in Denmark
Dragør is located in Capital Region
Dragør
Dragør
Dragør (Capital Region)
Coordinates: 55°35′33″N 12°40′20″E / 55.59250°N 12.67222°E / 55.59250; 12.67222
CountryDenmark
RegionCapital (Hovedstaden)
MunicipalityDragør
Government
 • MayorEik Bidstrup
Area
 • Urban
4.72 km2 (1.82 sq mi)
Population
 (2025)[1]
 • Urban
12,304
 • Urban density2,600/km2 (6,800/sq mi)
 • Gender [2]
5,955 males and 6,349 females
Time zoneUTC+1 (Central Europe Time)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2
Websitehttps://www.dragoer.dk/

Dragør (Danish pronunciation: [ˈtʁɑːwˌøɐ̯ˀ]) is the main town of Dragør Municipality, (Denmark), which includes the village of Store Magleby. The city hall and seat of the municipal council lies on Kirkevej 7 (postal code 2791 Dragør) in Store Magleby, which has enough space for such a large building.

Geography

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Dragør, on the southeastern coast of the island of Amager, is located only 12 km from central Copenhagen. Together with the neighbouring village of Store Magleby, it forms a separate urban area with a population of 12,304 (1 January 2025).[1]

Dragør has many well-preserved historical buildings. The old part of the town is a compact, picturesque maze of alleys with yellow-painted houses, red roofs, and cobblestone streets built in the traditional Danish style. Many of these buildings are hundreds of years old.

Dragør was a prosperous seafaring town in the latter half of the 19th century, and its charming harbour front is still in use.[citation needed]

History

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Dragør was founded in the 12th century, and grew quickly as a fishing port. In 1370, the Hanseatic League was granted some trade privileges in the town. Dragør continued to grow - as the home of one of the largest fishing fleets in the country and as a base for salting and processing fish.

The first part of the name, Drag-, refers to drawing (dragging) boats ashore. The ending -ør is common in Scandinavian placenames and means a beach covered in sand or gravel.

The area has a Dutch ancestry that is still much in evidence. In the early 16th century, King Christian II invited a group of farmers from the Netherlands — at the time a more agriculturally advanced nation than Denmark — to settle in the area and produce food for the royal household. Twenty-four families arrived. They and their descendants settled in the village of Store Magleby. Tensions between the Dutch farmers of the inland and the Danish fishermen and sailors at the coast are still detectable now, with a certain rivalry between citizens of Store Magleby and Dragør. The Dutch peasants delivered vegetables to the Amagertorv market in Copenhagen. Among their many other achievements they were responsible for introducing the carrot to Denmark. Dutch and Low German were still spoken on Amager until the 19th century.

Dragør was made an independent parish 1 April 1954, before that being a part of Store Magleby parish.

Attractions

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  • The Amager Museum, an open-air recreation of life in old rural Amager.
  • Dragør Museum, a seafaring museum located at Dragør harbour.
  • The Kastrupgaard Collection (Kastrupgårdsamlingen) in nearby Kastrup. An art museum on the premises of an estate from the 18th century.
  • Mølsted Museum, in the heart of old Dragør in the artist's studio, an art museum dedicated to the works of seascape painter Christian Mølsted (1862–1930).
  • Dragør is the sister city of Kodiak, Alaska.[3]

Economy

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Prior to its dissolution, Maersk Air had its headquarters in Dragør.[4] When it existed, Sterling Airlines had its head office at Copenhagen Airport South in Dragør.[5]

Notable people

[edit]
Christian Mølsted, 1890

Sport

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Poetry

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  • Poet and translator from Tula, Russia and Israel Petr Pinkhas Frizen did dedicate the poem titled "Olivian Dragor" to the Dragor's Daughter Olivia Koch. The poem contains an allusion to the story of the Foremother of the Jewish People Rachel and the mandrakes of the eldest son of the Foremother Leah. The Danish Dragor in this poem is a symbol of hope for the revival and flourishing "Olivian - Israelite, Jacobian" Renaissance of the ancient Jewish - Russian - Friesian family.

"Olivian Dragor." Petr Pinkhas Frizen - Friesen

The time does mercilesly flow./ ...The tides do come. The ebbs do go.../ North Seas caress minute Dragor./ In moods we might be high and low./ Life might be not top prime galore./

Sometimes the Danish coast in fog/ Enshrouded. Horizon's misty.../ My polar star - Olivia Koch -/ The Hope in the kismet Friesian twisting./

The light's illuminating darkness/ And stormy's billowing tempest./ With Dragor's Daughter is no likeness/ In oceanic waving fest!/

She is Rachel! And She is Lea!/ I like Fore Mothers do implore:/ O, Danish lass, I plead do dare/ For Thy be Bibles Mandragore!/

I wish to be as much desired/ For You as mandrake was at time/ For Jacobites, when Rachel sired/ With Reubens roots the fate devine.../

Israelite historic tribal/ Predestined path la Mandragore!/ Olivia, have You see the tidal/ Wave by the dunes of Yours Dragor?../

I gazed this miracle innate!/ I witnessed natural appearance!/ This - You Armour Dragor soulmate!/ Your whirlwind Heart is my endearance.../

Shy bodeful Thy emotions gale/ Revivifies my spirit glorious./ Its white and lonely Friesian sail/ Skuds to Dragorian shores canorous.../

Through haze, through purple cirrus rain/ To You, to promised Land Dragor!/ To sands Olivian golden shore/ I, as Shakespearean clueless Dane,/ Do swim dissecting oceans plain./

Olivia! Daughter of Dragor!/ Rachelian Danish Viking Beauty.../ Be mine Jacobian Mandragore.../ In grace devine allow procreation Duty!/

References

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  1. ^ a b BY3: Population 1. January by urban areas, area and population density The Mobile Statbank from Statistics Denmark
  2. ^ BY1: Population 1. January by urban areas, age and sex The Mobile Statbank from Statistics Denmark
  3. ^ ""Sister Cities" Dragør Travelogue by lmkluque". Archived from the original on 10 June 2013. Retrieved 27 April 2013.
  4. ^ "Maersk Air Headquarters." Maersk Air. 2 April 2003. Retrieved on 9 January 2010.
  5. ^ "Contact." Sterling Airlines. Retrieved on 13 February 2011. "Head office Sterling Airlines A/S Copenhagen Airport South 2791 Dragoer Denmark."
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Media related to Dragør at Wikimedia Commons

55°35′N 12°40′E / 55.583°N 12.667°E / 55.583; 12.667