Dannemand was elevated to the
comital rank (
lensgreve) by a secret royal
rescript dated 3 October 1839, issued by his father, King
Frederik VI, less than two months before the king's death. Lensgreve is the highest
title of nobility in
Denmark, and broadly comparable to that of
dukes in other European countries. The matter was handled by
Police Director , who was ordered not to disclose the rescript until after the king's death. A sealed counterpart was also sent to the
Danish Chancellery with instructions not to open it prematurely. No formal
patent () appears to have been issued. After the
1848 regime change, Dannemand submitted a petition to
Justice Minister C. E. Bardenfleth requesting the erection of a formal
county (). On 9 February 1849, the
Council of State declined to issue a patent, citing the new
1849 constitution's prohibition on the creation of new
fiefs, but did not dispute his right to use the title lensgreve under the terms of the 1839 rescript. The 1839 rescript granted him and any legitimate descendants the right to bear a count's
arms and enjoy the privileges of a Danish
feudal count, provided he created a comital endowment () of 120.000 rigsdaler, of which 70.000 had to be invested in 4%
government bonds and the remainder be paid from Frederik's maternal inheritance. He later bought
Aastrup manor on Zealand in 1842, and secured royal permission to
mortgage the endowment on the estate. From its inception, the foundation struggled with persistent financial difficulties. It was hinted that Frederik was "a bit extravagant in financial matters". In 1884, shortly before his death, Count Dannemand sold Aastrup to his nephew Frederik
Brockdorff in an attempt to resolve the institution's fiscal problems. The transaction, however, led to
litigation, and the sale was ultimately annulled in 1890. Thereafter, the estate was placed under official administration, and the foundation remained dormant until the estate's economy had sufficiently recovered. In 1928, the stift was formally revived, operating under the name Aastrup Kloster, and today accepts both men and women, primarily from the Dannemand family (descendants of his two sisters).
Contact with the royal family Although ennobled and elevated to the comital rank, Dannemand's relationship with the
royal court was limited and remains only partially documented. Unlike earlier illegitimate children of
Danish monarchs, he appears to have lived a comparatively discreet life with little public prominence, though he maintained some personal contact with members of the
royal family. In 1834 he accompanied his father, King Frederick VI, on a tour of
Jutland, and in 1844, following the death of his first wife, he was received by King
Christian VIII, who recorded in his diary: “(...) I add further that Major Dannemand has been with me, and that, following his initial outburst of grief, I found him composed”. From his early twenties he was admitted to royal residences, including the
Bernstorff Mansion, home of his half-sister
Princess Caroline and her husband
Ferdinand, Hereditary Prince of Denmark. While Princess Caroline initially avoided contact with her father's former mistress, she later accepted Frederik Dannemand's presence at court. Both she and her sister
Vilhelmine, daughters of Frederick VI, appear to have established relations with their half-siblings only after the king's death. Frederick VI is reported to have taken a particular interest in his only adult son, who in youth was noted for a certain physical resemblance to the king. Frederick VI supported the Dannemand family by setting up in 1837 a state-bond fund worth 325,986
rigsdaler for Madame Dannemand and her younger children, to be paid out on marriage or adulthood; a similar fund for the eldest daughter had been created in 1836, with
interest as her only benefit. In his
memoirs,
Privy Councillor and
cabinet secretary Jens Peter Trap described that during the last months of Frederick VI’s life in late 1839, the entire Dannemand family visited
Amalienborg Palace "nightly", lodging with the
royal valet, Westergaard, who was involved in the matter.
Perlen (), the white
parade horse of Frederick VII, was
taxidermied after the king's death in 1863 and passed through several
exhibitions before being purchased in 1873 by Lensgreve Dannemand. At the time, new stables were under construction following a major fire at the Aastrup estate, and the horse was later installed there. After Dannemand's death in 1888,
Perlen was sold at the 1890
Copenhagen Circus Building auction, complete with its
caparison and
curb bridle, as one of over 800 lots from his estate.
1865 Stockholm visit In 1865, the Count and Countess Dannemand visited
Stockholm, where he was awarded the Commander’s Cross of the
Norwegian Order of St. Olav by
Charles XV of Sweden and Norway, interpreted as a reminder of his father’s former
kingship of Norway. The Countess engaged in friendly conversation with Charles XV, and the visit prompted comment and grumbling in Copenhagen. Upon returning, Countess Dannemand remarked that “it was as if Dannemand were another
Corfitz Ulfeldt,” referring to the 17th-century statesman whose defection to Sweden made his name synonymous with
treason. Privy Councillor responded with a widely noted rejoinder, downplaying the comparison and offering a more benign interpretation. == Marriages and illegitimate issue ==