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Driving in Maribo in Denmark. winter.Maribo is a central city and old market town in the middle of Lolland with 5,786 inhabitants (2025)[. It is primarily known as the Cathedral City of Maribo with its majestic old monastery church, Maribo Cathedral, as a landmark. It is also known as the birthplace of the poet-priest Kaj Munk. The city is one of the few Danish market towns that is located inland - without direct sailing connections to the waters and seas around Denmark. The market town is surrounded by the Maribo Islands, where tourist boats sail around to the small islands in the summer. From the city station there is a veteran railway connection, the Maribo-Bandholm Museum Line, to the small port town of Bandholm by the Smålandsfarvandet and to Nakskov and Nykøbing F with the Lolland Line (Local Train). Maribo is characterized by being an old city without much industry.[source missing] In the southern part of the city center there are a number of older neighborhoods with small streets and alleys. By the cathedral are the ruins of St. Birgitta Monastery from 1416, which was already in disrepair when Leonora Christina lived here in the late 17th century. Today there is a Catholic church in Maria Gade. St. Birgitta Church was built for the Polish beet workers in 1897. Other older buildings are the Chapel Farm from 1756 and Maribo Town Hall from 1856 on the Square. Maribo is a traffic hub on Lolland. The E47 motorway passes Maribo. From the city it is a good eight kilometres to Sakskøbing, a good 13 to Rødby, a good 28 to Nakskov, 26 to Nykøbing Falster and 52 kilometres to Vordingborg. Maribo is the seat of Lolland Municipality and belongs to Region Zealand History A street with old houses. Maribo Monastery was founded in 1416 and established by Queen Margrethe I (1353-1412) on the Grimstrup farm. Maribo town was founded at the monastery.[ The history of the market town of Maribo is therefore inextricably linked to St. Birgitta Monastery (Maribo Monastery). At the place where Maribo is now located, there was a small village of Skimminge in the early 15th century. A special order within the Catholic Church, the Birgittine Order, chose this place to build a monastery dedicated to the Virgin Mary. The monastery, which was completed in 1416, was divided into two separate wings – one for monks and one for nuns. The two groups met in the monastery church that would become Maribo Cathedral. The monastery church was built in the years 1413-1470. The Birgittine Order now sought permission from the Pope to call the place Maribo, a derivation of "Marie-bo": a "religious dwelling for the holy virgin". The same year that the monastery was completed, it and the surrounding settlement were granted market town rights by Erik of Pomerania, and the Pope gave his consent to the place name Maribo in 1418. This is where the town's history begins. Maribo's coat of arms shows Saint Birgitta of Vadstena, who founded the Birgittine Order. Even with market town rights, it was difficult for Maribo to develop into a proper trading town, because the town was not located by the sea. But Maribo Monastery grew during the 15th century into one of Denmark's most distinguished and important monasteries, not least because many of its residents and financial supporters belonged to the nobility. [source missing] The Birgittine Order was also the guardian of the nearby Østofte Church, which Christopher of Bavaria had donated to Maribo Monastery, and which the Pope had confirmed in 1453. The market town of Maribo was to assist the monastery financially and provide able-bodied citizens when building work was required. Right up until the Reformation, several kings, popes and cardinals favored and confirmed Maribo Monastery's privileges by letters of indulgence to those who donated gifts to the monastery. Gradually, other Danish monasteries began to apply for admission to the order, such as Sankt Agnete Monastery in Roskilde in 1487. Many wealthy men and women had themselves appointed as "brothers and sisters outside" in order to share in the monastery's reputation. The monastery was thriving and even the Reformation in 1536 did not diminish the monastery's power in comparison with other Danish monasteries.