fbpx
Wikipedia

Jacob De la Gardie

Field Marshal and Count Jacob Pontusson De la Gardie (Reval, 20 June 1583 – Stockholm, 22 August 1652) was a statesman and a soldier of the Swedish Empire, and a Marshal from 1620 onward.[1]

Count Jacob De la Gardie
Jacob De la Gardie in 1606
Lord High Constable of Sweden
In office
1620–1652
Preceded byAxel Nilsson Ryning
Succeeded byGustaf Horn
Governor of Swedish Estonia
In office
1619–1622
Preceded byAnders Eriksson Hästehufvud
Succeeded byPer Gustafsson Banér
1st Governor-General of Swedish Livonia
In office
1622–1628
Succeeded byJohan Skytte
Personal details
Born(1583-06-20)20 June 1583
Reval (Tallinn), Swedish Estonia
Died22 August 1652(1652-08-22) (aged 69)
Stockholm, Sweden
Spouse(s)Ebba Brahe
(m. 1618–52; his death)
Children14, including:
Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie
Maria Sofia De la Gardie
Axel Julius De la Gardie
Residence(s)Makalös Palace, Stockholm
Läckö Castle

He was Privy Councilor from 1613 onward, Governor of Swedish Estonia in 1619–1622, Governor-General of Livonia in 1622–1628 (conquered by the Swedish Empire in 1621, and referred to as Swedish Livonia in 1629–1721), and Lord High Constable from 1620. He introduced reforms based on the then novel Dutch military doctrine into the Swedish army. He commanded the Swedish forces in Russia and against the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. He also served as one of the five regents jointly ruling Sweden during the minority of Queen Christina.

Biography edit

Antoine Marie Jacob De la Gardie was born in Reval (today Tallinn), Estonia (then part of the Swedish Empire), as a son of Pontus De la Gardie and Sofia Johansdotter Gyllenhielm, the illegitimate daughter of King John III of Sweden. His mother died giving birth, and his father perished two years later in Narva. From his age two onward, Jacob was raised in the Vääksy (Swedish: Växiö) manor, Kangasala, Finland (then part of Sweden proper) by his grandmother Karin Hansdotter (Finnish: Kaarina Hannuntytär), the mistress of King John III.

As a young adult, De la Gardie was held prisoner in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth for four years, together with Carl Gyllenhielm. After being released, De la Gardie took part of the Dutch Revolt as a volunteer.[2] In 1606–1608, De la Gardie served under the Dutch general Maurice of Nassau, Prince of Orange. Impressed with the Dutch way of waging war, De la Gardie began introducing Dutch methods into the Swedish army upon his return to the service of Sweden.

Prelude to Jacob de La Gardie Campaign edit

The Tsardom of Russia had been experiencing the Time of Troubles (1598–1613) since the death of Tsar Feodor I in 1598, causing widespread political instability and a violent succession crisis for the title of Tsar of Russia by usurpers known as the False Dmitris. In 1605, the Polish-Muscovite War started when the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth unofficially invaded Russia in support of False Dmitry I against the unpopular crowned tsar Boris Godunov, seeking to exploit the country's weakness for their own gain. Godunov died in June 1605 and was replaced by False Dmitry I, whose popularity among the Russian populace declined rapidly during his reign, and the Polish withdrew when he was eventually murdered during an uprising in Moscow in May 1606.

Despite this, Russia's instability continued to the near-total breakdown of order, prompting the Polish to invade again in 1607 in support of the new usurper, False Dmitry II. In 1609, the Tsar of Russia at the time, Vasili IV, approached King Charles IX of Sweden to form a military alliance against False Dmitry II and the Polish occupiers. The two signed the Treaty of Viborg (Finnish: Viipuri), in which Russia ceded Kexholm County and the strategic Korela Fortress to Sweden in exchange for military support.[3] This Russian alliance with Sweden, the main rival of Poland, led to King Sigismund III of Poland officially declaring war on Russia in response.

Execution of the campaign edit

In 1608–1613, De la Gardie as Sweden's Chief Commander in Finland also commanded the Swedish war efforts in Russia. Thus, in accordance with the Swedish-Russian military alliance formed in 1609, he together with Evert Horn now took charge of providing an auxiliary corps to support the Russian forces commanded by Mikhail Skopin-Shuisky.[3]

Although officially the Swedish-Russian alliance was not ratified before July 1609, already in the early spring of 1609 Sweden gathered for this mission to the city of Viborg in Finland (then part of Sweden) c. 5,000 soldiers, consisting mainly of Finns.[4][5][6] A Swedish offensive heading towards Moscow – via Novgorod – began from Viborg on 11 March 1609. The operation became known as De la Gardie campaign. It was a joint military campaign by the Tsardom of Russia and Sweden during the Polish-Russian War (1605-1618), a.k.a. Polish–Muscovite War or the Dimitriads, lasting officially from April 1609 to 4 June 1610.

A combined Russo-Swedish army of about 10,000 soldiers set out from Novgorod in April 1609 and marched towards Moscow, defeating rebel forces and relieving the Siege of Troitse-Sergiyeva Lavra on their way. The De la Gardie campaign was successful against False Dmitry II, dispersing his court in Tushino, a former village and town to the north of Moscow, where Dmitry II maintained an alternative court, challenging the authority of Vasili IV. On 12 March 1610, the Russo-Swedish army broke the rebel siege of Moscow and conquered the city.[7]

In June 1610, De la Gardie and Prince Dmitry Shuisky – an uncle and rival of Skopin-Shuisky (who was poisoned at the behest of his uncle) – departed from Moscow, in order to lift the Polish-Lithuanian Siege of Smolensk. The campaign ended with most of De la Gardie's forces defecting to the Polish hetman Stanisław Żółkiewski at the Battle of Klushino, causing a defeat to De la Gardie's alliance on 4 June 1610. After this, De la Gardie's remaining army returned to Viborg during that summer.[2][6]

Ingrian War (1610–1617) edit

Not long thereafter, the Ingrian War in 1610–1617 between Sweden and Russia was initiated, during which De la Gardie played a significant role militarily. A new army was rapidly being formed for Jacob De la Gardie, again stationed in Viborg. It this time included four foreign mercenary fighting units, in addition to Finns and Swedes (seven cavalry and two infantry units arrived from Stockholm to Turku on 25 January 1611).[6]

De la Gardie also claimed that Sweden should take advantage of the ongoing turmoil in Russia, later known as the Times of Trouble, and try to place Charles Philip, younger brother of the Swedish King Gustavus Adolphus, on the Russian throne. After some negotiating, these plans were abandoned due to lack of engagement from Gustavus Adolphus, and due to uncertainty on the Russian side.[8][9]

In 1617, De la Gardie became the chief Swedish negotiator at the Treaty of Stolbovo that ended the Ingrian War, whereby the Swedish Empire was able to secure important territorial concessions from Russia, effectively closing off Russia from access to the Baltic Sea.

From July 1619 to 1622, De la Gardie was Governor of the Swedish Estonia. In 1626, he purchased an estate with a medieval castle in Haapsalu, in modern-day Estonia. His time as governor of Estonia was followed by a time as Governor-General of Livonia in 1622–1628 (conquered by the Swedish Empire in 1621, and referred to as Swedish Livonia in 1629–1721).

After 1621, De la Gardie took part in the Polish–Swedish War (1621–1625) against his mother's half-brother, King Sigismund III of Poland (a former king of Sweden), in Livonia, but he was recalled after serving as commander in chief between 1626 and 1628. De la Gardie was an advocate of peace with Poland and acted as one of the Swedish negotiators at the Truce of Stuhmsdorf in 1635.

Member of the Privy Council edit

 
Jacob De la Gardie
 
Ebba Brahe

De la Gardie became a member of the Swedish Privy Council in 1613. In 1620, he became Lord High Constable and, as such, he was later one of the five regents ruling Sweden during Queen Christina's minority (1632–44). His pacifist and pro-French and pro-Polish attitudes often put him at odds with Chancellor Axel Oxenstierna, who led Sweden's war effort in the Thirty Years' War after the death of Gustavus Adolphus in 1632.

As De la Gardie supported many of Oxenstierna's other policies, eventually the two leaders reconciled after Oxenstierna's return to Sweden in 1636. Although the Marshal's Office came under criticism that year, De la Gardie continued to operate effectively, making large profits from leasing royal revenues and from loans to the crown.

Family life edit

In 1618, De la Gardie married Ebba Brahe, the love of young Gustavus Adolphus. The couple had 14 children, the most famous among them being Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie, Maria Sofia De la Gardie, Axel Julius De la Gardie and Countess Christina Catharine De la Gardie (1632–1704), who married Gustaf Otto Stenbock and was mother of Magnus Stenbock.

Death and legacy edit

 
The coat of arms of Jakobstad, a town named after De la Gardie.

Count Jacob De la Gardie died in Stockholm in 1652 and is buried in the Veckholm Church in Uppsala County, Sweden. The town of Jakobstad in Finland is named after him. A shopping mall in Old Tallinn is named De la Gardie in honor of him. During the Ingrian War, the Finnish soldiers nicknamed their commander Laiska-Jaakko ("Lazy Jacob"), due to the unusually lengthy six-year occupation of Novgorod. This name is still widely remembered in Finland. The siege was thus recorded in a folk verse: Lähti suvi, lähti talvi, vaan ei lähde Laiska-Jaakko. ("The summer left, the winter left, but Lazy Jacob does not leave.")

References edit

  1. ^ Vilhelm Fredrik Palmblad (1838): Biographiskt Lexicon öfver namnkunnige Svenska Män 4, D – Fl; Upsala, pages 83–97.
  2. ^ a b Eriksson, Bo (2007). Lützen 1632 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Norstedts Pocket. pp. 64–65. ISBN 978-91-7263-790-0.
  3. ^ a b Željko., Fajfrić (2008). Ruski carevi (1. izd ed.). Sremska Mitrovica: Tabernakl. ISBN 9788685269172. OCLC 620935678.
  4. ^ Childs, John (2001): Warfare in the Seventeenth Century, Cassell, London. ISBN 0-304-36373-1
  5. ^ Ericson Wolke, Lars (2004): Johan III – en biografi, Historiska Media, Lund. ISBN 91-85057-47-9, LIBRIS-id: 9501098.
  6. ^ a b c Petander C-B (1964): J. Anteckningar om österbottniskt fotfolk före år 1625, Vasa, Österbotten.
  7. ^ Velikai︠a︡ russkai︠a︡ smuta : prichiny vozniknovenii︠a︡ i vykhod iz gosudarstvennogo krizisa v XVI-XVII vv. Strizhova, I. M., Стрижова, И. М. Moskva: Dar. 2007. ISBN 9785485001230. OCLC 230750976.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  8. ^ Eriksson, Bo (2007). Lützen 1632 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Norstedts Pocket. pp. 76–79. ISBN 978-91-7263-790-0.
  9. ^ Dunning, Chester (2004). A Short History of Russia's First Civil War: The Time of Troubles and the Founding of the Romanov Dynasty. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press. pp. 273, 282–283. ISBN 0271024658.

External links edit

jacob, gardie, other, members, gardie, family, gardie, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspap. For other members of De la Gardie family see De la Gardie This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Jacob De la Gardie news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Field Marshal and Count Jacob Pontusson De la Gardie Reval 20 June 1583 Stockholm 22 August 1652 was a statesman and a soldier of the Swedish Empire and a Marshal from 1620 onward 1 Count Jacob De la GardieJacob De la Gardie in 1606Lord High Constable of SwedenIn office 1620 1652Preceded byAxel Nilsson RyningSucceeded byGustaf HornGovernor of Swedish EstoniaIn office 1619 1622Preceded byAnders Eriksson HastehufvudSucceeded byPer Gustafsson Baner1st Governor General of Swedish LivoniaIn office 1622 1628Succeeded byJohan SkyttePersonal detailsBorn 1583 06 20 20 June 1583Reval Tallinn Swedish EstoniaDied22 August 1652 1652 08 22 aged 69 Stockholm SwedenSpouse s Ebba Brahe m 1618 52 his death Children14 including Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie Maria Sofia De la Gardie Axel Julius De la GardieResidence s Makalos Palace StockholmLacko Castle He was Privy Councilor from 1613 onward Governor of Swedish Estonia in 1619 1622 Governor General of Livonia in 1622 1628 conquered by the Swedish Empire in 1621 and referred to as Swedish Livonia in 1629 1721 and Lord High Constable from 1620 He introduced reforms based on the then novel Dutch military doctrine into the Swedish army He commanded the Swedish forces in Russia and against the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth He also served as one of the five regents jointly ruling Sweden during the minority of Queen Christina Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Prelude to Jacob de La Gardie Campaign 1 2 Execution of the campaign 1 3 Ingrian War 1610 1617 1 4 Member of the Privy Council 1 5 Family life 1 6 Death and legacy 2 References 3 External linksBiography editAntoine Marie Jacob De la Gardie was born in Reval today Tallinn Estonia then part of the Swedish Empire as a son of Pontus De la Gardie and Sofia Johansdotter Gyllenhielm the illegitimate daughter of King John III of Sweden His mother died giving birth and his father perished two years later in Narva From his age two onward Jacob was raised in the Vaaksy Swedish Vaxio manor Kangasala Finland then part of Sweden proper by his grandmother Karin Hansdotter Finnish Kaarina Hannuntytar the mistress of King John III As a young adult De la Gardie was held prisoner in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth for four years together with Carl Gyllenhielm After being released De la Gardie took part of the Dutch Revolt as a volunteer 2 In 1606 1608 De la Gardie served under the Dutch general Maurice of Nassau Prince of Orange Impressed with the Dutch way of waging war De la Gardie began introducing Dutch methods into the Swedish army upon his return to the service of Sweden Prelude to Jacob de La Gardie Campaign edit The Tsardom of Russia had been experiencing the Time of Troubles 1598 1613 since the death of Tsar Feodor I in 1598 causing widespread political instability and a violent succession crisis for the title of Tsar of Russia by usurpers known as the False Dmitris In 1605 the Polish Muscovite War started when the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth unofficially invaded Russia in support of False Dmitry I against the unpopular crowned tsar Boris Godunov seeking to exploit the country s weakness for their own gain Godunov died in June 1605 and was replaced by False Dmitry I whose popularity among the Russian populace declined rapidly during his reign and the Polish withdrew when he was eventually murdered during an uprising in Moscow in May 1606 Despite this Russia s instability continued to the near total breakdown of order prompting the Polish to invade again in 1607 in support of the new usurper False Dmitry II In 1609 the Tsar of Russia at the time Vasili IV approached King Charles IX of Sweden to form a military alliance against False Dmitry II and the Polish occupiers The two signed the Treaty of Viborg Finnish Viipuri in which Russia ceded Kexholm County and the strategic Korela Fortress to Sweden in exchange for military support 3 This Russian alliance with Sweden the main rival of Poland led to King Sigismund III of Poland officially declaring war on Russia in response Execution of the campaign edit In 1608 1613 De la Gardie as Sweden s Chief Commander in Finland also commanded the Swedish war efforts in Russia Thus in accordance with the Swedish Russian military alliance formed in 1609 he together with Evert Horn now took charge of providing an auxiliary corps to support the Russian forces commanded by Mikhail Skopin Shuisky 3 Although officially the Swedish Russian alliance was not ratified before July 1609 already in the early spring of 1609 Sweden gathered for this mission to the city of Viborg in Finland then part of Sweden c 5 000 soldiers consisting mainly of Finns 4 5 6 A Swedish offensive heading towards Moscow via Novgorod began from Viborg on 11 March 1609 The operation became known as De la Gardie campaign It was a joint military campaign by the Tsardom of Russia and Sweden during the Polish Russian War 1605 1618 a k a Polish Muscovite War or the Dimitriads lasting officially from April 1609 to 4 June 1610 A combined Russo Swedish army of about 10 000 soldiers set out from Novgorod in April 1609 and marched towards Moscow defeating rebel forces and relieving the Siege of Troitse Sergiyeva Lavra on their way The De la Gardie campaign was successful against False Dmitry II dispersing his court in Tushino a former village and town to the north of Moscow where Dmitry II maintained an alternative court challenging the authority of Vasili IV On 12 March 1610 the Russo Swedish army broke the rebel siege of Moscow and conquered the city 7 In June 1610 De la Gardie and Prince Dmitry Shuisky an uncle and rival of Skopin Shuisky who was poisoned at the behest of his uncle departed from Moscow in order to lift the Polish Lithuanian Siege of Smolensk The campaign ended with most of De la Gardie s forces defecting to the Polish hetman Stanislaw Zolkiewski at the Battle of Klushino causing a defeat to De la Gardie s alliance on 4 June 1610 After this De la Gardie s remaining army returned to Viborg during that summer 2 6 Ingrian War 1610 1617 edit Not long thereafter the Ingrian War in 1610 1617 between Sweden and Russia was initiated during which De la Gardie played a significant role militarily A new army was rapidly being formed for Jacob De la Gardie again stationed in Viborg It this time included four foreign mercenary fighting units in addition to Finns and Swedes seven cavalry and two infantry units arrived from Stockholm to Turku on 25 January 1611 6 De la Gardie also claimed that Sweden should take advantage of the ongoing turmoil in Russia later known as the Times of Trouble and try to place Charles Philip younger brother of the Swedish King Gustavus Adolphus on the Russian throne After some negotiating these plans were abandoned due to lack of engagement from Gustavus Adolphus and due to uncertainty on the Russian side 8 9 In 1617 De la Gardie became the chief Swedish negotiator at the Treaty of Stolbovo that ended the Ingrian War whereby the Swedish Empire was able to secure important territorial concessions from Russia effectively closing off Russia from access to the Baltic Sea From July 1619 to 1622 De la Gardie was Governor of the Swedish Estonia In 1626 he purchased an estate with a medieval castle in Haapsalu in modern day Estonia His time as governor of Estonia was followed by a time as Governor General of Livonia in 1622 1628 conquered by the Swedish Empire in 1621 and referred to as Swedish Livonia in 1629 1721 After 1621 De la Gardie took part in the Polish Swedish War 1621 1625 against his mother s half brother King Sigismund III of Poland a former king of Sweden in Livonia but he was recalled after serving as commander in chief between 1626 and 1628 De la Gardie was an advocate of peace with Poland and acted as one of the Swedish negotiators at the Truce of Stuhmsdorf in 1635 Member of the Privy Council edit nbsp Jacob De la Gardie nbsp Ebba Brahe De la Gardie became a member of the Swedish Privy Council in 1613 In 1620 he became Lord High Constable and as such he was later one of the five regents ruling Sweden during Queen Christina s minority 1632 44 His pacifist and pro French and pro Polish attitudes often put him at odds with Chancellor Axel Oxenstierna who led Sweden s war effort in the Thirty Years War after the death of Gustavus Adolphus in 1632 As De la Gardie supported many of Oxenstierna s other policies eventually the two leaders reconciled after Oxenstierna s return to Sweden in 1636 Although the Marshal s Office came under criticism that year De la Gardie continued to operate effectively making large profits from leasing royal revenues and from loans to the crown Family life edit In 1618 De la Gardie married Ebba Brahe the love of young Gustavus Adolphus The couple had 14 children the most famous among them being Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie Maria Sofia De la Gardie Axel Julius De la Gardie and Countess Christina Catharine De la Gardie 1632 1704 who married Gustaf Otto Stenbock and was mother of Magnus Stenbock Death and legacy edit nbsp The coat of arms of Jakobstad a town named after De la Gardie Count Jacob De la Gardie died in Stockholm in 1652 and is buried in the Veckholm Church in Uppsala County Sweden The town of Jakobstad in Finland is named after him A shopping mall in Old Tallinn is named De la Gardie in honor of him During the Ingrian War the Finnish soldiers nicknamed their commander Laiska Jaakko Lazy Jacob due to the unusually lengthy six year occupation of Novgorod This name is still widely remembered in Finland The siege was thus recorded in a folk verse Lahti suvi lahti talvi vaan ei lahde Laiska Jaakko The summer left the winter left but Lazy Jacob does not leave References edit Vilhelm Fredrik Palmblad 1838 Biographiskt Lexicon ofver namnkunnige Svenska Man 4 D Fl Upsala pages 83 97 a b Eriksson Bo 2007 Lutzen 1632 in Swedish Stockholm Norstedts Pocket pp 64 65 ISBN 978 91 7263 790 0 a b Zeljko Fajfric 2008 Ruski carevi 1 izd ed Sremska Mitrovica Tabernakl ISBN 9788685269172 OCLC 620935678 Childs John 2001 Warfare in the Seventeenth Century Cassell London ISBN 0 304 36373 1 Ericson Wolke Lars 2004 Johan III en biografi Historiska Media Lund ISBN 91 85057 47 9 LIBRIS id 9501098 a b c Petander C B 1964 J Anteckningar om osterbottniskt fotfolk fore ar 1625 Vasa Osterbotten Velikai a russkai a smuta prichiny vozniknovenii a i vykhod iz gosudarstvennogo krizisa v XVI XVII vv Strizhova I M Strizhova I M Moskva Dar 2007 ISBN 9785485001230 OCLC 230750976 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Eriksson Bo 2007 Lutzen 1632 in Swedish Stockholm Norstedts Pocket pp 76 79 ISBN 978 91 7263 790 0 Dunning Chester 2004 A Short History of Russia s First Civil War The Time of Troubles and the Founding of the Romanov Dynasty University Park Pennsylvania State University Press pp 273 282 283 ISBN 0271024658 External links edit nbsp Media related to Jakob Pontusson De la Gardie 1583 1652 at Wikimedia Commons Lacko Castle The castle of Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie at Statens fastighetsverk Jacob De la Gardie 1583 1652 Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Image at heninen net Jaakkima Lahdenpohja at heninen net Jakob De la Gardie Biografiskt lexikon for Finland in Swedish Helsingfors Svenska litteratursallskapet i Finland urn NBN fi sls 4102 1416928956708 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacob De la Gardie amp oldid 1180168074, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.