The list includes two Saudis, a Canadian, a Syrian, and two Americans, including pastor Terry Jones who desecrated copies of the Holy Quran in 2011.
The blacklist "sends a clear signal that travelling fanatical religious preachers who try to undermine our democracy and fundamental values of freedom and human rights are not welcome in Denmark," the immigration and integration ministry said in a statement.
Danish man who burnt Quran to be charged under country's blasphemy law
The centre-right government has undertaken a systematic hunt for religious fanatics, announcing plans in May 2016 to establish a blacklist after a hidden-camera documentary exposed radical preachers in Danish mosques.
Parliament broadly approved the plan. In 2015, a young Dane of Palestinian origin who was radicalised in prison killed two people in twin attacks in Copenhagen, first gunning down a Danish filmmaker at a debate on Islam and free speech, then killing a Jewish security guard outside a synagogue.
The same year, a Moroccan man was stripped of his Danish citizenship, acquired in 1988, for having spread books written by a cleric with close ties to al Qaeda.
The Scandinavian country was also the target of Muslim anger worldwide after Danish daily Jyllands-Posten published caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) in 2005.
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