Henrik Fleming

{{short description|Swedish nobleman, admiral and diplomat}}

{{Infobox military person

|name = Henrik Klasson Fleming

|birth_date = 15 August 1584

|death_date = {{d-da|7 November 1650|15 August 1584}}

|birth_place = Åkerholm, Sweden (now Finland)

|death_place = Stockholm, Sweden

|image = Jacob Heinrich Elbfas - Henry Fleming (1584-1650) baron, Admiral, governor, married to 1. Ebba Eriksdotter Bååt, 2. Sigrid Kurtzel - NMGrh 1601 - Nationalmuseum.jpg

|caption = Portrait by Jacob Heinrich Elbfas, 1631

|nickname =

|allegiance =

|serviceyears =

|rank = Lord Marshal

|commands =

|battles = Treaty of Stolbovo
Torstenson War

|laterwork =

}}

File:Mynämäen kirkko2.jpg

Henrik Klasson Fleming (15 August 1584 – 7 November 1650) was a member of the Swedish nobility and admiral, diplomat and lord marshal.{{cite book|last=Nordisk familjebok|title=Fleming, Henrik Klasson|year=1908|publisher=Runeberg.org|location=Oslo|pages=563–564|url=https://runeberg.org/nfbh/0310.html|language=sv}} He was the author of one of the first autobiographies in Swedish, a colourful depiction of his early life which he wrote for his children in a moralising purpose.

Biography

Fleming was born at Åkerholm in Ingå, Uusimaa coast, Finland. He was raised at Yläne and Pöytyä in southwest Finland. He was a student in Rostock University (1602).

He was part of the king's command in active military service, having participated as a captain under King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden in war campaigns against Denmark and Russia.{{cite book|last=Svenskt biografiskt lexikon|title=Henrik Fleming|year=1917|publisher=Nad.riksarkivet.se|page=137|url=http://www.nad.riksarkivet.se/sbl/Presentation.aspx?id=14208|language=sv}}

In 1617 he was a Swedish delegate took part in the conclusion of the Treaty of Stolbovo which ended the Ingrian War. The same year he became governor of the Province of Viipuri and Olavinlinna and colonel of the cavalry at Karelia the following year.

In 1620 he was appointed governor of Ingria, colonel of the Finnish cavalry in 1622 and vice admiral in 1628. Along with Privy Council members Philip von Scheiding (1578-1646) and Erik Karlsson Gyllenstierna (1602-1657) he traveled in March 1634 as envoy to the Grand Duchy of Moscow. He was sharply criticized by the government, as he demanded payment to undertake this assignment. As lord marshal, he led the nobility party during the Riksdag of the Estates deliberations in 1643 and 1644.

As a military officer, one of his major successes was when he led the Swedish forces that conquered Jämtland in 1644.{{cite web|last=Nordling |first=Carl |title=Finland-Swede military men and civil servants |url=http://www.carlonordling.se/finlandssvenskar/2.html |publisher=Carlonording.se |accessdate=21 April 2013 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110911193644/http://www.carlonordling.se/finlandssvenskar/2.html |archivedate=11 September 2011 }}

In his youth he was left without any support from his father who had become a very rich man. He was for a few years struggling with poverty. Later, he supplied goods to the army through trade and leasing,{{cite book|last=Hallenberg|first=Mats|title=Statsmakt till salu: arrendesystemet och privatiseringen av skatteuppbörden i det svenska riket 1618-1635|year=2008|publisher=Nordic Academic Press|isbn=978-9185509041|page=70|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PxpXWn_yrJkC&dq=%22henrik+fleming%22&pg=RA1-PA70|language=sv}} so that by his death he had accumulated a fortune, both in wars and partly on business speculation, of which he used a large portion to benefit his people. He died on 7 November 1650 in Stockholm, Sweden.

In 1641, Henrik Fleming had financed the construction of Virmo Church (Mietoisten kirkko) in Mynämäki, Finland.

The Fleming family sandstone tomb from the year 1632 is located here.

{{cite web|url = http://www.mynamaenseurakunta.fi/kirkot-ja-tilat/mietoisten-kirkko|title=Mietoisten kirkko|publisher = mynamaenseurakunta

|accessdate= May 1, 2018}}

Personal life

He was son of Governor Klas Hermansson Fleming and Elisabet Henriksdotter Horn as well as the grandson of

Henrik Klasson Horn (c.1512 – 1595).

{{cite web|url = https://www.adelsvapen.com/genealogi/Fleming_nr_4 |title=Adliga äten Fleming|publisher = adelsvapen.com|accessdate= May 1, 2018}}

{{cite web|last=Lomans|first=Mattias|title=Henrik Claesson Fleming|url=http://www.mattiasloman.se/genealogy/nordenskjold/p49a605e9.html|publisher=Mattiasloman.se|accessdate=20 April 2013|language=sv}}

He married his sister-in-law Ebba Erlandsdotter Bååt (1588 – 1630) on 13 March 1608. He was the father of Johan Henriksson Fleming (24 June 1609 – 29 April 1646).{{cite web|last=Adelsvapen|title=Bååt nr 3|url=http://www.adelsvapen.com/genealogi/B%C3%A5%C3%A5t_nr_3|publisher=Adelsvapen.com|accessdate=21 April 2013|language=sv}}{{cite web|last=Wrede|first=Hélène|title=Fleming|url=http://www.wredes.com/Bas/Wrede/w.15.Fleming.htm|publisher=Wredes.com|accessdate=21 April 2013|language=sv}}

{{cite web|url = https://sok.riksarkivet.se/Sbl/Presentation.aspx?id=13828|title=Karl Henriksson Horn|publisher = Svenskt biografiskt lexikon

|accessdate= May 1, 2018}}

See also

References

{{Reflist|2}}

;Attribution

  • This article is based on the translation of the corresponding article of the Swedish Wikipedia. A list of contributors can be found there in the [http://sv.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Henrik_Klasson_Fleming&action=history History] section.

{{Commonscat|Henrik Klasson Fleming}}

{{Authority control}}

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Category:1584 births

Category:1650 deaths

Category:People from Ingå

Category:Swedish Navy vice admirals

Category:Diplomats for Sweden

Category:Swedish nobility

Category:17th-century Swedish military personnel

Category:17th-century Finnish nobility

Category:Members of the Riksdag of the Estates

Category:People from the Swedish Empire