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From
a small fishing village that hardly anyone had
ever heard of to a position as the dazzling capital
of the Danish Empire and to its current position
as one of the world's most talked about as well
as sung of cities is a colourful history.
There are evidence that Copenhagen existed as
a settlement more than 6,000 years ago, but its
first written record dates 1043 AC.
Copenhagen, in those days called "Havn",
meaning the harbour, was of little strategic or
political importance. Most of the people in "Havn"
earned their daily bread by fishing for the plentiful
herring in the Øresund. In the next two centuries
fishing and trading turned the small fishing village
into a flourishing town.
And in 1343 King Valdemar Atterdag made Copenhagen
the capital of Denmark - today the seat of the government
and the hometown of the Danish royal family.
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