Born in
Copenhagen on 21 August 1805, Bournonville was the son of the French ballet master
Antoine Bournonville, who had settled in
Denmark, and Lovisa Sundberg, a Swede. At the age of eight, he entered the Royal Ballet School at the Court Theatre in
Christiansborg Palace under the tutelage of his father and
Vincenzo Galeotti, ballet master and principal choreographer of the
Royal Danish Ballet from 1775 to 1816. On 2 October 1813, Bournonville made his first stage appearance in a small part as the son of a Viking king in Galeotti's
Lagertha, the first ballet on a Nordic theme. Less than a year later, he received his first personal applause for dancing a Hungarian solo at the Court Theatre. In addition to dance, Bournonville was a voracious reader, learned French at home, played the violin, sang in a boy soprano voice, and studied declamation with the actors
Michael Rosing, Lindgreen, and Frydensdahl. His many talents were brought together on the Queen's birthday, 29 October 1817, when as a twelve-year-old he played the role of Adonia to royal acclaim in a music-drama, ''Solomon's Judgment'' and sang a romance, "The Mother with Her Drooping Wings". ==Family==