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Conrad, Count von Reventlow (21 April 1644 – 21 July 1708) was a Danish statesman who was "Grand Chancellor of Denmark" (Danish: Danmarks storkansler), a predecessor title of the Prime Minister of Denmark, from 1699 until his death. His chancellorship occurred during the reign of King Frederick IV.[1]
Conrad, Count of Reventlow | |
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Count | |
Grand Chancellor of Denmark | |
Predecessor | Frederik Ahlefeldt |
Successor | Christian Christophersen Sehested |
Born | 21 April 1644 Copenhagen, Denmark |
Died | 21 July 1708 Clausholm estate, Denmark | (aged 64)
Buried | Schleswig Cathedral, Germany |
Noble family | Reventlow |
Spouse(s) | Anna Margrethe Gabel
(m. 1651; died 1678)Sophie Amalie von Hahn
(m. 1664) |
Issue | Christian Ditlev, Count Reventlow Anna Sophie, Queen of Denmark and Norway |
Father | Ditlev Reventlow |
Mother | Christine Rantzau |
Early life
editConrad von Reventlow was the son of Chancellor Ditlev von Reventlow (1600–1664) and his wife, Christine zu Rantzau (1618-1688). He was the brother of chamberlain Count Henning von Reventlow (1640–1705) and Chancellor, Count Ditlev von Reventlow (1654–1701).
Career
editMilitary career
editHe attended Academy in Sorø Academy and studied at the University of Orleans (1662). After attending university, Reventlow was called to the Danish Court in 1665, where he rose through various positions of responsibility. In the 1670s, he became a colonel in the Danish military. He recruited a regiment and distinguished himself in the Scanian War (1675–1679).[2]
In 1700, Reventlow was deeply involved in the negotiations for peace with Sweden during that country's naval blockade of Copenhagen, an early event in the Great Northern War. Both France and the United Kingdom dealt extensively with Reventlow in their efforts to pressure Denmark to declare peace, in order to prevent a wider war from spreading into Europe.[3]
Councillor and Grand Chancellor
editIn 1672, he became a land commissioner in Schleswig-Holstein. In 1685, Reventlow used his influence as a councilor to the court on behalf of privateer Benjamin Raule (1634-1707), to promote Danish acquisition of the island of St. Thomas in the West Indies.[4][5]
In 1678, he applied for leave from service when his wife was incurably ill.
Family
editHe married twice; with his first wife, Countess Anna Margarethe Gabel (1651-1678), he had two children:
- Christian Detlev, who played a prominent political role
- Christine Sophie (1672-1757) became an influential advisor to her sister and brother-in-law, the Danish queen and king.
With his second wife, Sophie Amalie Hahn of Seekapm (1664-1722), he had three children:
- Anne Margrethe (1682–1710), married Hans Schack, 2nd Count of Schackenborg
- Ulrikke Eleonor (1690-1754), married Count Ferdinand Anton Gyldenløve, a grandson of King Frederick III by his mistress, Margrethe Pape
- Anna Sophie (1693-1743), married Frederick IV in 1721, becoming the first modern Queen of Denmark not to have been born a princess.
His sarcophagus in the Schleswig Cathedral (Schleswiger Dom) was designed by the renowned sculptor Thomas Quellinus.
Ancestry
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References
edit- ^ Carl Frederik Bricka. "Reventlow, Conrad Greve, 1644-1708". Dansk biografisk Lexikon. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
- ^ Kannegaard and Skeel Family Tree of Greve Conrad Reventlow[usurped].
- ^ Sir George Rook in Oscar Browning, ed., Publications of the Navy Records Society, Vol. IX, (1898 [1700-02]) p. 100.
- ^ Waldemar Westergaard, The Danish West Indies Under Company Rule (1671-1754) (1917), p. 76.
- ^ "Benjamin Raule (1634–1707)". Museum Lichtenberg. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
Additional sources
edit- Jirí Louda and Michael MacLagan, Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe, 2nd edition (London, U.K.: Little, Brown and Company, 1999), table 19.