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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ludvig_MunkLudvig Munk - Wikipedia

    Died. 8 April 1602. Funen, Denmark. Occupation. Junker. Known for. Nobleman. Ludvig Ludvigsen Munk (1537 in Vejle – 8 April 1602 at Nørlund castle, Funen) was a Danish official and Count. He was also referred to as Ludvig Ludvigsen Munk von Schleswig-Holstein and Ludvig Munk til Nørlund.

  2. Ludvig Munk ( 1537 - 8. april 1602) til Nørlund, hørte til slægten med 3 roser i våbenet. Faderen, hed også Ludvig Munk og døde samme år, som sønnen blev født, formodentlig forinden, i alt fald før sønnens dåb, siden denne blev opkaldt efter ham. Moderen hed Kirstine Lykke . Han tog 24 år gammel tjeneste som hofjunker, men i 1564 ...

  3. In 1618/1619 – five generations later – Holger Rosenkrantz (died 1638) sold Boller to Ellen Marsvin (1572–1649), the widow of Ludvig Munk, who in 1607 married secondly Knud Rud, and whose daughter Kirsten Munk had in 1615 married King Christian IV (1577–1648).

  4. She was born at Landskrona Citadel in Scania (Skåne), a part of Denmark that was conquered by Sweden in 1658 and has been Swedish since. She was the daughter of the noble, council and governor Jørgen Marsvin (ca. 1527–81) and Karen Gyldenstierne (ca. 1542–89). She was married to Count Ludvig Munk (1537–1602) in 1589.

    • Early Career
    • Seven Years' War
    • Governor-General of Norway
    • Personal Life
    • Bibliography

    Around 1548, records show that Huitfeldt was with his brother Christoffer, the bailiff at Bergenhus Fortress, in Bergen. In the summers of 1552–54 and over the winter of 1554–55, he served as the king's representative on Iceland. Accompanied by a military force, he completed the conversion of Icelanders to the Lutheran faith after the last Catholic...

    As the Kalmar Union broke down, Erik XIV in Sweden and Frederik II in Denmark were at odds. On 13 August 1563, Denmark and Lübeck emissaries declared war in Stockholm. During the Northern Seven Years' War, Huitfeldt was in charge of Halmstad, a port town in the then-Danish province of Halland, which he held during a siege by Swedish forces in the a...

    Background

    From the collapse of the Norwegian Royal Council in 1536-1537, as the Reformation gained a dominant position in Norway, until 1572, there was no central Norwegian government to link the king in Copenhagen with his royal officials and common citizens. Each feudal lord (lensherre) was the highest authority in his district and was responsible only to the king through the Norwegian Chancellor in the Chancellery (Kancelli) in Copenhagen. Since the former Norwegian Royal Council represented Norway'...

    Huitfeldt's Tenure

    Following the war, Huitfeldt was dispatched to Norway, assuming the role of feudal lord of Brunla Manor in Larvik from 1570 to 1574. In April 1572, he was additionally appointed as the feudal lord for Akershus and Tromsø. On May 10, 1572, he was designated to serve as the Governor-general of Norway and as a judge at the lagtings in Oslo, Bergen, and Trondheim. His responsibilities included addressing and resolving complaints from various provinces, overseeing and meticulously managing local o...

    Huitfeldt was born around 1520,to Otte Clausen Huitfeldt (who died between 1517–1529) and Barbara Eriksdatter Blaa (who died before 1558). He was the youngest among four brothers, all of whom relocated to Norway, including Christoffer Huitfeldt (c. 1501–1559) and Peder Huitfeldt (who died in 1584). On 4 February 1554, he wed Margrethe Breide, the d...

    Dansk Biografisk Leksikon, vol. 6. Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 1979-84.
    Gyldendal og Politikens Danmarkshistorie, vol. 7. Copenhagen: Gyldendal and Politiken, 1988-93.
    S. Kolsrud (red.): Oslo og Hamar bispedømmes jordebok 1574–77, 1929
  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Kirsten_MunkKirsten Munk - Wikipedia

    Kirsten Munk was the daughter of Ludvig Munk (1537–1602) and Ellen Marsvin (1572–1649), members of the wealthy but untitled Danish nobility. Her mother, widowed a second time in 1611, was the greatest landowner on Funen .

  6. Biographie. Ludvig Ludvigsen Munk (né en 1537 à Vejle, décédé le 8 avril 1602 en Fionie) était un fonctionnaire dano-norvégien. Il était le fils de Ludvik Munk (1500-1537), et était également appelé Ludvig Ludvigsen Munk von Schleswig-Holstein et Ludvig Munk de Nørlund .