Lilliendal is a manor house and estate located at Vordingborg in southeastern Denmark. The estate covers approximately 800 hectares of mostly farmland.
Lilliendal was established by Hans Gustav Lillienskiold in the 1760s and later owned by the Knuth family for almost two hundred years from the 1800s to 1994. A relatively small main building from 1765 was expanded in the 1850s and again in 1919. Lilliendal replaced a village called Skuderup which in the 17th century consisted of ten farms and four houses. The largest of the farms, Skuderupgaard, is first mentioned in 1664 when it was owned by Anne Gjordes. It changed hands many times before it was acquired by Hans Gustav Lillienskiold in 1760. The rest of Skuderup had been included in Vordingborg Cavalry District in the 1710s, which was now divided into 12 estates and sold in auction. Two of these estates, Skuderup and Høvdingsgaard, were acquired by Lillienskiold. He then merged Skuderupgaard and Skuderup under the name Lilliendal. Hans Gustav Lillienskiold was a naval officer. His maternal grandfather, Hans Hansen Smed had been ennobled under the surname Lillienskiold in 1776. He had met his first wife in the Danish West Indies. It was this marriage that had provided him with the economic means to purchase the estates. His wife died on the Skuderupgaard estate in 1768.
Reiersen and Uldall
In 1785 Lillienskiold sold Lilliendal to Niels Lunde Reiersen, a wealthy merchant from Copenhagen, who already owned Nysø, Jungshoved and Oremandsgaard. Reiersen died unmarried in 1795. Lilliendal and Høvdingsgaard was then sold at auction to State Prosecutor General Peter Uldall. His intention was to establish a barony for his son but it had still not been realized when he died in 1798. Two years later his widow, Antoinette Hansen, sold Lilliendal to Thomas Bech.
Knuth family
Adam Christopher Knuth bought Lilliendal from Thomas Bech in 1802. Knuth was the first Baron of Christiansdal on Lolland. It 1704 he was granted royal permission to dissolve the barony and in 1821 to convert Lilliendal into a fideikommis. He later ceded Lilliendal to his son, Christian Frederik Knuth who kept the estate until his death in 1852. He was succeeded by his son, Adam Knuth, who undertook major alterations of the buildings. Adam Knuth's son, Christopher Knuth who was also active in politics, sold most of the remaining tenant farms to the tenant farmers. The fideikommis was dissolved as a result of the lensaafløsningsloven of 1921. Christopher Knuth ceded Lilliendal to his son Christian Knuth in 1936. Ulrich Knuth succeeded his father on the Lilliendal estate in 1950. He sold the estate to Ted Kallehave in 1984 but lived there until his death in 2002.
Architecture
The core of the main building was built for Hans Gustav Lillienskiold in 1765. It was yellow, single-story Empire-style building. It was adapted in the beginning of the 19th century and underwent major alterations after being taken over by Adam Knuth in 1852. He lengthened the building and added an extra floor, the roof was replaced by a more shallow, half hipped tile roof and the facade was decorated with robust cornices and triangular pediments above the windows on the second floor. The facade towards the garden features a median risalit with veranda topped by a triangular pediment. The building was again lengthened in 1919.