Johan Ludvig Mansa

Danish landscape architect
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroDanish landscape architect
PlacesDenmark
wasGardener
Gender
Male
Birth10 April 1740, Zweibrücken, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Death13 April 1820 (aged 80 years)
The details

Biography

Johan Ludvig Mansa (April 10, 1740 – April 13, 1820), was a German-Danish landscape gardener, born April 10, 1740 in Zweibrücken, Germany, where his father was palace gardener. In 1765 he went to Denmark and was gardener at Fuglsang Manor, Lolland. In the 1780s, he was appointed as a gardener and steward of Marienlyst Castle in Helsingør, Denmark and in 1794 as a gardener at Frederiksborg Castle. Finally in 1799 he was employed as a gardener and steward at Fredensborg Palace. The majority of his work was in transforming formal French gardens into English landscape gardens. Some remnants of his works can still be seen on the slope north of Marienlyst Castle in Helsingør as well as a few manors and palaces around Denmark.

Books

He was the author of "Havekatekismus eller Grundregler for nyttige Havevæxters Dyrkning i Danmark" (Basic rules for growing of useful plants in Denmark) published in 1789 and won the Kgl Danske Landhusholdningsselskab prize. One of his other books "Gardening structures the English way" also contributed to the his large influence on the development of gardening and horticulture in Denmark. He was greatly appreciated by King Frederik VI of Denmark who decorated him with the Order of the Dannebrog

Marriage

On July 1, 1772 he married Anne Christine Voigt and then after her death, married Louise Toxwærd (b. December 31, 1769 d. March 23, 1853) on Oct 9, 1791 with whom he had ten children, six sons and four daughters. Louise was the daughter of merchant Henrik Christian Toxwærd, owner of Louis grove on Falster and Anna Margrethe Hauen Dorff.

Order of the Dannebrog

Order of the Dannebrog ribbon
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