Gustav Carlsson von Börring

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gustav Carlsson

Gustav Carlsson , since 1674 Swedish Count von Börring ( Greve av Börringe ), Lord of Lindholm (born March 13, 1649 in Stockholm ; † January 11, 1708 in the Frisian Castle ter Horn; in the literature, the year 1647 is sometimes given, and as the date of death January 1, 1708), was the illegitimate son of King Carl X. Gustav of Sweden, an officer in the Swedish and general government services as well as a large Swedish and Frisian landowner.

Life

Counts coat of arms of Gustav Carlsson

He was the first, albeit illegitimate, son of the future Swedish King Carl X. Gustav with his mistress , the daughter of the Stockholm councilor Claes Allerts and the Brita Jakobsdotter, Brigitta Allerts (sometimes called Märta Allertz in the literature differently ).

At this point in Friesland stood Gustav Carlsson's ter Horn Castle

He first grew up in the house of the Swedish Imperial Admiral Baron Carl Carlsson Gyllenhielm , a natural son of King Carl IX. and half-brother of King Gustav II Adolf , and in the house of his aunt Marie Euphrosine De la Gardie , then with Bishop Samuel Enander in Linköping .

Gustav Carlsson was gifted with considerable goods from his royal father, which enabled him to travel to the European royal courts for ten years. In Strasbourg he was enrolled at the university from March 1660 to February 1663. He then visited Heidelberg until 1664, he was in Sedan from September 1664 to 1666, in England and Holland he stayed in 1666, and in Paris from December 1666 to October 1667. Then he stayed in Italy until the summer of 1668 .

In the Danish War of 1675 he showed his younger half-brother, King Carl XI. , stately services. However, with the great reduction in goods , the king also withdrew his own.

The Frisian Terhorne 2009

Gustav Carlsson was Lieutenant General in the service of the United Dutch States General and accompanied King William of Orange in his transition to England, and also in the first Irish campaign.

After that he spent his life in solitude in the Frisian castle ter Horn, which he married in 1685 to Ameland with the marriage of Baron Isabella Susanna von Schwarzenberg (1640–1723; sometimes differently called Sofia Amalia in literature), the daughter of Georg Friedrich von Schwarzenberg (1607–1670) and Gaets Tjarda van Starkenborgh, married and where he had built a select library . His wife came from the Frisian line of those von Schwarzenberg , which was founded by Johann Onuphrius von Schwarzenberg (1513–1584), who was a grandson of Michael von Schwarzenberg zu Hürblach (documented 1473; † 1489), the son of the episcopal councilor of Würzburg, captain and bailiff Michael von Seinsheim auf Schwarzenberg and Ursula Grüner.

Count Gustav Carlsson's marriage remained childless.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Gustaf Carlson (accessed July 16, 2014)
  2. a b August Benedikt Michaelis , Introduction to a Complete History of the Chur and Princely Houses in Germany , Volume 2, Lemgo 1760, p. 110 ( digitized version )
  3. Brita Allerts in Wilhelmina Stålberg, Anteckningar om Svenska qvinnor (1864)
  4. familysearch.org: Karl X Johansson, King of Sweden ( Memento of the original from July 14, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (accessed on July 12, 2014) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / histfam.familysearch.org
  5. a b uni-erlangen.de: Gustav Karlsson Graf v. Börring (accessed on July 12, 2014)
  6. a b Vilhelm Fredrik Palmblad, Biographiskt Lexicon öfver namnkunnige svenska men: Br - C, Volume 3 , Upsala 1837, p. 192 f., "Carlsson, Gustaf" ( digitized version )
  7. genealogy.euweb.cz: Family tree descendants Palatine Ludwig I of Zweibrücken and Veldenz (1444–1489) resp. Family tree descendants of Erkinger I. von Schwarzenberg (accessed on July 12, 2014)
  8. The stories that took place under the victorious Emperor Joseph ..., Nuremberg 1719, p. 210 ( digitized version )
  9. GHdA , Adelslexikon Volume XIII, Complete Series Volume 128, Limburg an der Lahn 2002, pp. 190 f.