Friday 6 January 2012

Famous Place in Denmark

Famous Place in Denmark
 Tivoli is always evolving without abandoning its original charm or traditions. As Georg Carstensen said in 1844, "Tivoli will never, so to speak, be finished," a sentiment echoed just over a century later when Walt Disney said of his own Tivoli-inspired theme park, "Disneyland will never be finished as long as there is imagination left in the world." Walt Disney during a trip overseas with his wife Lilly visited Tivoli
Gardens. Walt was so impressed with the Danish amusement park, he immediately decided Disneyland should try to emulate its "happy and unbuttoned air of relaxed fun."

Famous Place in Denmark
 From the National Museum in Copenhagen, cross the Frederiksholm Kanal to the island of Slotsholm on which stands Christiansborg Palace, seat of the Danish Government and Parliament (Folketing). This building also houses the Foreign Ministry, the Supreme Court and the Queen's Audience Chambers. Parliament and the Royal Rooms can be visited on guided tours.The palace occupies the site on which Bishop Absalon built the earliest fortifications of the city in 1167. Ruins of the bishop's castle, which was destroyed in the 14th C., as well as of the medieval fortress which passed to the crown under Erich von Pommern, were discovered when the present palace was being built and can now be seen by visitors.
Famous Place in Denmark
 William Shakespeare’s famous tragedy “Hamlet” takes place in the castle of Kronborg. Known by many as “Elsinore”, the castle is located in Elsinore (or Helsingor), North of Copenhagen. Immortalised by Shakespeare, it is a Renaissance castle built by Danish King Frederik II in 1574-84.
Famous Place in Denmark

Famous Place in Denmark
 I have also been in denmark and sweden but do not know the
names of the places, where I went....
I live in london so have seen  all the famous places here
and yeah I have also seen many places in pakistan (lahore & islamabad, murree)

and there are so many places where I want to go eagerly to!
Famous Place in Denmark
From January 14, 2008 the Centre will be offering a bolstered selection of foreign language courses, including Arabic, Brazilian Portuguese, Danish, Gaelic, Greek, Norwegian and Polish.
Each language course will last for 10 weeks, with classes running for 2 hours on either weekday evenings or Saturday mornings, covering 5 different levels: Beginners, Early Intermediate, Intermediate, Upper Intermediate and Advanced.
The Director of the Language Centre, Douglas Bell, said he remained eager to expand the Centre's already impressive linguistic range.
"The Chinese and Japanese courses that we introduced last term have been really popular and going by the number of daily inquiries that we receive, there is clearly room for us to broaden our scope even further.
"I'm particularly pleased to see us offering Polish, Danish and Norwegian, as all of these languages are becoming more and more important in Aberdeen, especially in the commercial sector. It's also great to be putting on classes in our local language Gaelic as the interest in this has really taken off. I think we have some really exciting days ahead."
For further enrolment details, contact the Language Centre directly at lceveningclasses@abdn.ac.uk or 01224 27 2537.
The deadline for online applications is December 17 and University of Aberdeen students, staff and alumni can benefit from a £10 discount on the usual course price of £92.

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