Frøslevlejrens Museum

Southern Jutland


The town of Padborg (population 4500), right by the German border, is the site of Frøslevlejren, an internment camp opened near the end of WWII following negotiations with Germany to keep Danish POWs in Denmark (despite this agreement, 1600 Danish patriots were deported to concentration camps in Germany). During its nine months in operation, Frøslev held 12,000 prisoners.

Frøslevlejrens Museum tells fascinating stories of the Danish Resistance movement and daily prison life at Frøslev.

If you’ve visited other German-run wartime camps, you’re in for a surprise here. A shining light in the German POW camps, Frøslev had ample food, no torture and no executions (prisoners were even allowed one visitor per month). The only real horror was the threat of deportation across the border. Interestingly, when the war ended, the camp’s name was changed and the new inmates were suspected Nazi collaborators.

Frøslevlejren is on the northwestern outskirts of Padborg, 1km west of the E45 (take exit 76). Bus 110 connects Sønderborg with Padborg, but there are no buses to the museum – you’ll need to walk or take a taxi the 4km from Padborg.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Southern Jutland attractions

1. Schiffahrtsmuseum

5.4 MILES

An engrossing museum right on the old harbour. Displays here give the history of rum and the seafarers who shipped and drank it. Cool models show how…

2. Oluf-Samson-Gang

5.45 MILES

Once a notorious thoroughfare known by sailors for its brothels, cobblestoned Oluf-Samson-Gang has been transformed into one of the prettiest streets in…

3. Museumsberg Flensburg

5.72 MILES

This hilltop museum features two wings: one contains a collection of rooms and furniture from Schleswig-Holstein history, including a remarkably painted…

4. Braasch

6.04 MILES

Some of the prettiest Kaufmannshöfe (merchants' courtyards) can be found off the very picturesque Rote Strasse, which is up from the harbour by the…

5. Schloss Glücksburg

8.61 MILES

Glücksburg is renowned for this horseshoe-shaped, blindingly white Renaissance palace, which appears to float in the middle of a large lake. Brooding when…

6. Gråsten Slotshave

12.07 MILES

For three weeks each summer the sleepy town of Gråsten (population 4200) is abuzz as Queen Margrethe and Prince Henrik (and usually the extended family)…

7. Gråsten Slotskirke

12.14 MILES

The only part of Gråsten Palace open to the public is this richly adorned chapel, built between 1699 and 1702 and the only section of the old castle to…

8. Historiecenter Dybbøl Banke

17.56 MILES

On 18 April 1864 the German army steamrolled the Danes and took control of southern Jutland until the end of WWI. On the western edge of town, this…