The Gefion fountain is the largest monument in Copenhagen that's also used as a wishing well. Designed by Anders Bundgaard, the beautiful and majestic fountain was sculpted in the late 1900s, first activated in July 1908, and renovated in 1999. Recommissioned in 2004, the fountain is definitely worth a stop.
The legend behind the Gefion Fountain comes from Nordic mythology, where the Swedish king Gylfe offered goddess Gefion as much of Sweden as she could plow in one day and one night. Gefion turned her four sons into oxen and harnessed them to plow. Her four sons plowed so deep into the ground, that when time expired, Gefion lifted up the land and dropped it into the sea between Sweden and Funen Island in Denmark, creating the biggest island in Denmark, Zealand Island. The hole left behind became Lake Vänern, which is actually shaped somewhat similarly to Zealand Island, legend or not. read more