" There's another major collection a short walk away over the Slotsholmen moat: the National Museum (TuesSun lOampm; 20kr), which has an ethnographic section in a separate wing at Ny Vestergade 10, but is really strongest (as you'd expect) on Danish history; if you've any interest at all in the subject you could spend a good couple of hours here. Much of the early stuff, ranging from prehistory to the Viking days, comes from Jutland jewellery, bones and even bodies, all of it remarkably wellpreserved and much only discovered after wartime fuel shortages led to largescale digging of the Danish peat bogs. Informative explanatory texts help clarify the Viking section, the best of which apart from the infamous homed helmets are the sacrificial gifts, among them die Sun Chariot, a model horse carrying a sun disc with adornments of gold and bronze. Further floors store a massive collection of almost anything and everything which featured in Christianage Denmark up to the nineteenth century finely engraved wooden altarpieces, furniture, clothing and more as well as a good section on peasant life. Christianshavn From Christiansborg, a bridge crosses the Inder Havnen to the island of Amager and into CHmSTIANSHAVN, built by Christian IV as an autonomous new towTi in the early sbrteenth century to provide housing for workers in the shipbuilding industry. It was given features more common to Dutch port towns of the time, even down to a small canal (Wilders Kanal), and in parts the area is more redolent of Amsterdam than Copenhagen. Although its present inhabitants are fairly welloff, Christianshavn still has the mood of a workingKilass quarter, with a grouping of secondhand shops along Torvegade that are good for rummaging and, along Overgaden oven Vandet on the canalside, some immaculately preserved houses. Besides the houses, take a walk down here for the Filmhuset, on the comer oj Store Sendervoldstraede, a small building but one that is the base of the national film industry and holds the Danish Film Museum (Mon, Tues, Tburs & Fn noonpm, SeptMay until 9pm on Tues; free). Here the dust is kept off th CHRISTIANSHAVN AND CHRISTIAN! АПЗ cameras, props and other remnants of an early film industry that before Hollywood and the advent of the talkies was among the world's most successful jnd advanced. Poking skywards through the trees on the other side of Torvegade is the blue and gold spire of Vor Frelsers Kirke OuneAug MonSat 9am4.30pm, Sun noon4.30pm; midMarch to May. Sept & Oct MonSat 9am3.30pm, Sun noon 3.30pm: rest of the year MonSat 10am1.30pm, Sun noon1.30pm; spire lOkr), on the comer of Prinsessegade and Skt Annaegade. The spire Qikely to be closed during 1993 for repairs), with its helterskelterlike outside staircase, was added to the otherwise plain church in the mideighteenth century, instantly becoming one of the more recognisable features on the city's horizon.