Beata Magdalena Wittenberg

Beata Magdalena Wittenberg (1644-1705), was a Swedish courtier.

She was the daughter of count Arvid Wittenberg and Eva Margareta von Langen, and married riksråd baron Henrik Horn in 1674.

In 1675, her spouse assigned her with a diplomatic mission to Hamburg. Her task was to secure the link between Sweden and its diplomats in Paris and London in connection to ongoing transfer of funds, and to secure the food-transport to the city of Stade, which was not yet conquered by Sweden and at the time besieged by Horn and the Swedish army. Reportedly, she developed "an activity worthy of respect on this post and managed to secure both funds and supplies to the disposition of her spouse".[1]

She was widowed in 1693. In 1698, she followed Hedvig Sophia of Sweden to Gottorp after her marriage to Frederick IV, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, and acted as her chief lady in waiting or Mistress of the Robes. During Hedvig Sophia's stay in Gottorp, Frederick regularly visited his lovers in Hamburg and also brought some of them to Gottorp. Wittenberg took the side of Hedvig Sophia and became involved in a physical argument with a male courtier who acted as the pimp of Frederick, an argument which ended with Wittenberg losing her wig and Hedvig Sophia's demand to return to Sweden.[2] Hedwig Sophia and Beata Magdalena Wittenberg did return to Sweden not long after.

Notes

  1. Henrik Horn, urn:sbl:13823, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (art av Sven Grauers), hämtad 2013-12-23
  2. Berättelser ur svenska historien / 27. Karl den tolftes regering. H. 7. Karl den tolfte och hans samtida
gollark: I'd like to note that it doesn't work on Linux. Admittedly the game apparently won't, but still.
gollark: As someone on Linux I'm not actually likely to play it anyway for years, so whatever.
gollark: Wow, people seem oddly infuriated about this.
gollark: I prefer orange squash batteries.
gollark: R3 1200 and GTX 1050! Very budgety.

References

  • Eva Österberg, ed. (1997). Jämmerdal & Fröjdesal. Kvinnor i stormaktstidens Sverige. Stockholm: Atlantis AB. ISBN 91-7486-355-X sid 332
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.