The Great Cabinet & The Count’s Roundel
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A Journey Back to the Late 18th Century
The Great Cabinet is the count’s entertaining room as it could have appeared in the late 18th century. The background for this narrative is Count Jørgen Scheel and his young wife Christiane Mette Bille-Brahe, who took over Gammel Estrup and the entire extensive estate empire in 1790.
The young couple quickly had children and created a home for themselves according to the fashion and ideals of the time. People distanced themselves from the artificial world of the rococo, with its powdered wigs, stiff costumes and robes and endless rounds of parties and banquets, where everyone played a specific role. It was now all about discovering the natural and individual aspects in people. The magnificent halls and elegant rooms of the rococo were replaced by the ideal of the home as a place of domestic comfort and more informal social gatherings, for example salons with music, readings and discussions.
The new ideals and social mores were reflected in the decoration and furnishing of the home. The rococo’s gilt intricacies were replaced by the simpler and more practical Louis Seize furnishing style, inspired by the straight lines of antiquity. The Great Cabinet was used for larger gatherings, while the Count’s Roundel was where he could receive individual guests.







The Great Cabinet & the Count's Roundel
In the Great Cabinet, new ideals and forms of social interaction are reflected in the home’s interior, where the Rococo’s gilded scrollwork gave way to the more restrained Louis XVI style, inspired by the straight lines of antiquity
In the Count's Roundel, adorned with a unique hand-painted butterfly wallpaper, the count could receive select guests in an elegant setting
Other exhibitions
The Lord’s Manor
Renaissance nobleman Eske Brock's Parlour and manor Chapel
The Countess’s Elegant Rooms
The Countess's elegant Baroque interiors from the early 1700s
The Great Hall
The manor’s grand hall, which hosted large parties and celebrations
The Count’s Apartments
The Count's elegant rooms in cohesive Rococo style
Rooms for Science & Pastimes
The Wild Count’s fabulous study and family living room
The Gentlemen’s Manor
Rooms where gentlemen relaxed with a fine cigar in the late 19th century
The Manor of Family & Private Life
The count’s family bedrooms and living spaces in the mid-19th century
Modern Times
Old heirlooms side by side with modern conveniences in the 1920s
The Attic
The invisible world of the servants, drying loft and storage room
The servant’s domain
The manor kitchen and the servants’ quarters at the beginning of the 20th century
The cellar
Activity room and the servants’ hall
Gardens & Cultural Landscape
Magnificent Baroque garden and a complete manorial landscape
Kitchen Garden & Greenhouse
Utility gardens and the socalled 'vine and peach house'
The Forester’s Cottage
Workers house, showing the lives of the forest workers in the 1930s
Christmas Upstairs & Downstairs
Experience Christmas at the Manor 100 Years Ago
The Manor Garden
Summer Exhibition About the Manor Garden at Gammel Estrup