Germanic History and Culture Archive: Swedish Governors-General

söndag 14 april 2024

Swedish Governors-General

A governor-general (Swedish: generalguvernör) was appointed by the Swedish monarch as his permanent representative, with both civil and military jurisdiction, over parts of Sweden, from the 17th century to the early 19th century, when constitutional changes made the office obsolete. A governor-general was always appointed as the highest representative of the Swedish monarch in the dominions ruled, or the possessions governed, by Sweden. Conquered, and unintegrated, territories were apart from this, more or less allowed to retain their internal political structure.

Finland

Ingria

Karelia

Prussia

Pomerania

Bremen-Verden
















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Jöran Persson Tegel: Secretary and Procurator for King Eric XIV, Lord of Julita farm (1564-1568) and District Chief in Trögd (1568)

Jöran Persson Tegel (in later texts sometimes also referred to as Göran), born around 1530 in Sala, died 21 September 1568 in Stockholm, was...