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Countess af Slesvig og Ho Leonora Christine CHRISTIANSDATTER

Female 1621 - 1698  (76 years)


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  • Name Leonora Christine CHRISTIANSDATTER 
    Title Countess af Slesvig og Ho 
    Born 08 Jul 1621 
    Gender Female 
    Died 16 Mar 1698 
    Person ID I1415  Conrad Jenssen Family Tree
    Last Modified 19 Jun 2013 

    Father King CHRISTIAN, IV 
    Relationship Natural 
    Mother Kirstine MUNK,   b. 06 Jul 1598,   d. 19 Apr 1658  (Age 59 years) 
    Relationship Natural 
    Family ID F940  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Corfitz Jacobsen ULFELDT,   b. 1606,   d. 1664, Basel, Switzerland Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 58 years) 
    Family ID F930  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • 1641-51 Joint Lensmand Leonora Christine Christiansdatter Countess af Slesvig og Holsten of Hørsholm Len
      1643-64 Politically Influential in Denmark
      In 1641 her father, King Christian 4 granted her the tenantcy for life jointly with her husband, Corfitz Ulfeldt. Two years later he was appointed Chancellor of the Realm (Rigskansler), and since there was no Queen, she was de-facto first-Lady at the court. The death of her father in 1648 was followed by a power-struggle, which she and her husband lost. Her half-brother, Frederik 3, was elected king, but she and her husband continued to provoke the reigning couple. In 1651 they left the country and stayed by Queen Christina of Sweden until 1654, and then in Germany. In 1657 her husband sided with the Swedes during the war with Denmark, which Denmark lost. In 1659 her husband was charged with treason against the Swedish king, he was hit by a stroke, and she was in charge of his defence. They escaped to Denmark, where they were held in captivity until they were freed in 1662, after signing a number of humiliating declarations. Later the same year they were permitted to go abroad for treatment of Corfitz Ulfeldt, who had never recovered from the stroke, and during their travels, he made all kinds of plans against his brother-in-law. In 1663 she went to king Charles II to claim an old loan, but he gave her up to the Danes, she was transferred to Copenhagen and was put in prison in Blåtårn at the Royal Castle of Copenhagen, where she spend 22 years, while her husband died already in 1664. She was not freed until the death of her sister-in-law, Queen Sophie-Amalie, in 1685. During her time in Blåtårn, she wrote "Jammersmide" (Memory of Lamenting), one of the first Danish autobiographies by a woman, which was not published until 1869, though. She spent the rest of her life at the castle, Maribo Kloster. She was the mother of 10 children, and lived (1621-98).
      http://www.guide2womenleaders.com/Denmark_lensmaend.htm

      http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~mjstern/Leonora%20Christina.htm
      Leonora Christina (1621-98)
      Daughter of Christian IV (1588-1648) and Kirstine Munk. Leonora’s parents were not married in Church and she was not recognized as a princess. Instead she was given the title of countess of Schleswig Holstein (now a part of Germany). Her times; the establishment of an absolute monarchy in Denmark where a progressive notion of the economy was coupled with the strict regulation of intellectual and spiritual life.
      1636—marries Corfitz Ulfeldt, a favorite of the king—known as the signer of a peace treaty with Holland, as a traitor, and now, mainly as leonora’s husband.
      Christian dies in 1648, is succeeded by leonora’s uncle Frederik III and his Queen Sophie Amalie who is jealous of L and U ‘s power and influence.
      1651: there is a probe of Ulfeldt’s conduct—he is found to have taken money off the top of some govt’t contracts. He and Leonora flee to Stockholm and he is declared an enemy of the state. He becomes an open traitor when he supports the Swedes when they attack the Danes. The Swedish King Karl X Gustav, however begins to suspect Ulfeldt and sentences him to death. 1657: Swedish victory—treaty of Roskilde—Danes lose skane, blekinge and halland.Ulfeldt and Leonora flee to Copenhagen where they are arrested and sent to the island of Bornholm, Hammerhus castle is their jail for 1 and 1/2 years. They are released but Ulfeldt continues his intrique, he is forced to flee the country, and Leonora is arrested while on a trip to England. She is imprisoned in Copenhagen castle from Aug. 8 1663-May 19, 1685.
      Leonora’s Christine’s authorship:
      10 Chronicles of her experience set in the light of political events:
      1) Kong Karl X Gustav’s Bryllup (1654)
      2) Rejsen til Kørsør (1656)
      3) Confrontationen I Malmö (1659) trial
      4) French autobiography (1673)
      5) Jamersminde: ist third Aug. 8-Aug.31—imprisonment and doubt to religious experience,2nd part—realist depictions, 3) experience with a series of women.
      6) Postumous work: Hæltindes Pryd (not published until 1977 Herione’s adornment) : series of sketches of both mythological and historical heroines. She writes here : “The soul is no regarder of sex and remains unchanged by outward aspect and form.”

      Jammersmind: autobiography as resistance and the construction of the Lutheran subject in a personal relationship to God. The text opens up with an address to her children: There she compares her self to Job and argues that while it might be better to forget one’s sorrows and burdens, she desires to remember them, to write them down as a testament to how these sorrows, while an earthly burden, are as light as a grain of sand when viewed from the optic of the eternal. She goes on to state that her sorrows were the vehicle through which her relationship to God and her understanding of his mercy developed. It is here that we can see that the Birgitine notion of revelation and witness, the woman as the vehicle of divine law, is replaced by the woman who experiences a direct relationship with the eternal. The notion of subjectivity has changed from Birgitta’s role as a conduit to Leonora’s conviction that the subject has a personal responsibility within a nexus of relationships. This is further evident when we look at the end of Jammersminde and see thet Christine expresses her gratitude towards those who have shown her kindness and mentions that the 11 people who treated her badly died a painful death. It was part and parcel of her Lutheran perspective that God settles his score with individuals even in life.
      The text itself, when seen in its totality, offers us an example of autobhiography as resistance and the construction of subjectivity as the assumption of personal responsibility for suffering. There is also a strong proto-feminist component as when LC was imprisoned she was offered the possibility of amnesty—all she had to do was to state that because of her womanly weakness—she was seduced by Ulfeldt into treason—she was even read his death sentence—her reaction was to take personal responsibility and she wrote: That day God enacted a great miracle and gave me a sign, in that he gave me the strength to master my weak mind and wild tongue, and preserved my restraint. God is therefore honored thousandfold.”
      She calls herself” “Christikorsdragerske” (88)
      Also an pg. 88 she states, “ God was the one who came in himself and approached me at the gate of tears, he was the one who reached out his hand and fought for me inside of the sinner’s prison that is called the dark church (mørke Kirke).



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