Agneta Jönsdotter (Svinhufvud)

Is your surname Jönsdotter?

Connect to 5,000+ Jönsdotter profiles on Geni

Agneta Jönsdotter (Svinhufvud)'s Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Agneta Jönsdotter

Also Known As: "Svinhufvud"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Stråtenbo, Aspeboda, Falun, Dalarna County, Sweden
Death: 1494 (63-64)
Ökna, Floda, Katrineholm, Södermanland County, Sweden
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Jöns Ingemarsson (Svinhufvud) and Kerstin Olofsdotter
Wife of Anders Larsson, till Ökna
Mother of Knut Andersson (Lillie af Ökna); Axel Andersson Lillie af Ökna; Lasse Andersson (Lillie af Ökna); Kerstin Andersdotter (Lillie af Ökna) and knut andersson lillie af ökna
Sister of Ingeborg Jönsdotter; Brita Jönsdotter; Måns Jönsson and Erik Jönsson

Managed by: Leif Ekman
Last Updated:

About Agneta Jönsdotter (Svinhufvud)

Agneta Jönsdotter

  • Daughter of Jöns Ingemarsson and Kerstin Olofsdotter

Married

Children

  • Lasse Andersson, son of Anders Larsson, Tab. 3), to Brunnsholm in Näs parish, Uppsala county. Brought in his seal, when he seals a letter on 1518-10-08, three lilies standing in a row over the shield. 1 . Married to Ingrid Eriksdotter , who lived as a widow in 1526 at Brunnsholm 2 , daughter of Erik Karlsson (greyhound), of Brunnsholm and Strömsta
  • Axel Andersson, to Länna in Almunge parish, Stockholm county. Front divided shield, in the upper field three lilies standing in a row above the shield 1 . Councilor at the Riksdag in Strängnäs 1523 4 . Received Länna farm in fief 2 s. å. 23/5. Was a squire in 1529 2 . Called superior in Uppland in 1530 and 1533 1 . Held the district court in Rasbo 2 1534-05-18--1536-08-01. Received deed of grant of Vesslands and Hällnäs parishes 2 1537-02-26. Lawman in Uppland 1528. Sealed sometimes by the council of the kingdom Västerås heritage society 1544-01-13. Still mentioned in the summons to the lord's day in Arboga 4p. y. 31/7 and was present there p. y. 26/8. Still alive on 1545-06-05, when he is called ex-lawman 2 , but was 2 dead on 1547-08-14. He sat in the court over Måns Bryntesson Lilliehöök et al in 1529 and over the rebellious valley men in 1534. Married to Margareta Mikelsdotter (Björnlår), who received a grant of two pound loads of grain etc. on 1559-04-05 and seems to have been alive as late as 1562, daughter of Mikel Eriksson to Kasby and Länna.
  • Kerstin Andersdotter, Married to Dalarne Olof Markvardsson, to Kniva, who was the great-grandfather of the war councilor Göran Olofsson, ennobled Stiernhielm .
  • Knut Andersson, Knight, councilor and lawman. (son of Anders Larsson, Tab. 3), to Ökna, Norrnäs in Värmdö parish, and Björnö. Hövidsman for King Gustaf I's soldiers in the camp at Rotebro 1521. Riksråd 1523-06-03. Lagman in Södermanland s. å. 15/1, which office he still held in 1538. Knight 1528-01-12 at the coronation of King Gustaf I. One of the subcontractors at the meeting in Lödöse s. å. 21/8. Had in 1528 and still in the early 1540s the entire county of Öland in fiefdom 7. Equally several castle laws in Stockholm 1531-11-08. Chief of War 22-02-1532. Received on 1533-06-19 all the goods that Knut Posse had given to churches and monasteries since King Carl's death. Was in 1533 and 1538 keeper of the national seal. Sat in the court over the conspirators 1536-05-05. Envoy to Russia p. 23/10. Again the castle law in Stockholm 1537-01-03. District chief in Sjuhundra district 1538-02-05. Held weapons inspection in Uppland, Södermanland and Närke s. å. King Gustaf I's regimental council in 1540. Häradshövding in Oppunda district and received Sköldinge parish, in fief s. å. Deputy to the meeting with the Danes s. å. 16/3. In 1541 and until his death, he had Villåttinge district 7 in fief . Envoy to Livland s. å. and to France in 1542. Received s. å .. Sealed among the council of the kingdom Västerås heritage association 1544-01-13. Obtained a grant of title on Fiskeboda farm in Julita parish, Södermanland county, dated 24/11. Received full to negotiate with the Russians on 28-06-1545 and to hold a royal retreat in Finland sd Lived on 29-04-1546, when he was summoned to participate in the meeting with the Lübecks, but did not appear. Was probably dead on 19/12. [ 2 ] 'He and Bishop Sommar appeased King Gustaf I at Västerå's Lord's Day in 1527, when he wanted to resign from the government. Along with others, went as surety for Bishop Hans Brask's relationship. Sat in 1529 in the court over Måns Bryntesson Lilliehöök et al. Married to Märta Göransdotter, who survived him, in her 2nd marriage (married 1st to Erik Persson Örnflycht ), daughter of the Riksdag Göran Hansson (Stiernsköld ) and his 1st wife Gertrud Posse .

Lillie Family, by The Swedish Biographical Dictionary

Volume 23 (1980-1981), page 70.

Biography

Lillie, salvation family, whose members for a long time only used first names and patronymics, and only around SEK 1580 can be proven to have adopted a family name after their coat of arms with three lilies. At Riddarhuset, it was called L af Ökna to distinguish it from other families L.

The family's oldest known ancestor was the squire Lasse Ödhinsson (not "Öndersson"; t earliest 1466) at Ökna in Flöda, Söd, who first appears in 1425, when he was awarded land in Västra Okna as an inheritance from his grandmother. The family tree information about his ancestors has not been able to be verified and is partly due to name combinations with people who in fact lived later than L.

His son the armsman Anders Laurensson (d at the earliest in 1491) on Ökna was married to a niece of the judge at Kopparberget Knut Jönsson (Svinhuvud ) father ofAxel Andersson(d about SEK 1546). This is mentioned as early as 1499 (Wieselgren) and appears in STb 1519 together with Sten Sture dyo 1520 together with his widow's followers. He became a lawman in Västmanland and Dalarna at the latest in 1523, a few days before Gustav I's ascension to the throne, then a councilor and between 1528 and 1530 a lawman in Uppland. A participated in the Västerås Riksdag in 1527, sat in the courts over Knut Mikaelsson (bd 21) in 1526, Peder Jakobsson (Sunnanväder) in 1527, the lords of Västgöta in 1529 o the leader of the clock rebellion in 1534 o was in the autumn of 1540 among the Swedish representatives at the meeting with the Danes in Kalmar. His seat was Länna in Almunge, Upps, which he received as a fief in 1523. As a fief, A also had Vendels and Tegelsmora parishes, Upps, from 1526 and still in 1529, in the 1530s Almunge parish and from 1537 Västlands and Hållnäs parishes, Upps,

A's brother the Riksrådet o lawman Knut Andersson (L 1) was the father of the Riksrådet o lawman Knut Knutsson or Knut L (L 2), o grandfather of Helena Snakenborg , who was married to King Henry VIII of England's brother-in-law William Parr, Marquess of Northampton. The family died out on the male side with L 2's son Knut L (d between 1628 and 1636) in Ökna. However, according to information only discovered in the middle of the 18th century, he must have had a sister named Anna L, who was King Gustav I's granddaughter Duke Gustavs of Saxony-Engern-Westphalia frilla and with him became the progenitor of the Rutencrantz family.

Author
H G-m

Knut Andersson (Lillie), by The Swedish Biographical Dictionary

Prefect, Lawman, Riksdag

1 Knut Andersson, d 1546 between 29 April and 19 December. Parents: gunsmith Anders Laurensson (Lillie) and a daughter (Barbro?) to Hinse Jönsson (Svinhuvud; see Gillingstam 1968-69). Earliest mentioned 16, one of the two chief officers for Gustav Eriksson's (Vasa) warriors at Rotebro north of Sthlm autumn 21, riksråd 2 (Bärätselse ... 1523) or 3 (GIR) June 23, lawman in Södermanland 15 Jan 26, knight at King Gustav's coronation 12 Jan 28, one of the three councils at the head of the castle law on Sthlm 8 Nov 31, here in Frötuna and Länna ships probably no later than 36, also in Sjuhundra hd and Bro o Vätö ships no later than 5 Feb 38, led by the regimental council no later than 40 .

G at the latest 1530 m Märta Jörgensdtr, t at the earliest 1547, dtr to the courtiers Jörgen Hansson (Stiernsköld) and Gertrud Nilsdtr (Posse) and widow (E 8676) of Erik Pedersson (Örnflycht), who fell in the battle at Badelundaåsen in 1520 (Bishop Hans Brask's family book ; Olavus Petri).

K has earliest been able to be traced in a report, which he wrote to Sten Sture d y in 1516 together with five from other sources who are bailiffs of known persons. It concerned their occupation of the manor of Sten Kristierns-son (Oxenstierna) Salsta, who was suspected of stamping with Christian II in Ten-sta, Upps, where K was left behind, when the others marched on.

According to Peder Svart, during Gustav Eriksson's (Vasa) siege of Sthlm in the fall of 1521, together with Staffan Sasse, K became a general for the warring people at Rotebro. In the fall of 1522, K in Lübeck wrote a debt bond on Gustav's behalf together with, among others, Berend v Melen, who had come there as one of the commanders of the Swedish fleet which now operated together with Lübeck's.

At the same time as his older brother Axel, K became councilor in 1523 a few days before Gustav I's accession to the throne, and at the beginning of 1525 he was one of those sent to Kalmar to persuade Berend v Melen, now suspected by the king of treason, to come to Sthlm. Like his brother, K sat in the courts over Knut Mikaelsson (bd 21) in 1526 and Peder Jakobsson (Sunnanväder) in 1527. According to Peder Svart, at the Västerås Riksdag in the latter year, he must have been one of those sent to the king to get him to withdraw his abdication threat. When the rebellion of the lords of Västgöt broke out in the spring of 1529, the Bishop of Køstrångnäs and two citizens of Stockholm were authorized to negotiate with the rebels, but the delegation was inhibited, after the king's supporters from Östergötland achieved the settlement in Broddetorp, and his name was among those added in the deed of settlement thence revised by the king. In the summer of that year, he sat like his brother in the court of the lords of Västgöta, and in 1530 he accompanied King Gustav to Finland. A letter from 1532 testifies that K was one of those sent to Lödöse on the occasion of the returned Christian II's conquest of Bohuslän. Like his brother, in 1534 he sat in the court over the leaders of the Bell Rebellion. According to Rasmus Ludvigsson, K participated during the Count's Feud in Johan Turesson's (Tre roros) campaign to Halland in the fall of s å, but he does not appear in the correspondence material about it (Pa-ludan-Mtiller). In 1536 he was one of the three members of the Riksdag who, together with a number of other people, sat in court over the conspiracy of some German citizens of Stockholm. o In 1530 he accompanied King Gustav to Finland. A letter from 1532 testifies that K was one of those sent to Lödöse on the occasion of the returned Christian II's conquest of Bohuslän. Like his brother, in 1534 he sat in the court over the leaders of the Bell Rebellion. According to Rasmus Ludvigsson, K participated during the Count's Feud in Johan Turesson's (Tre roros) campaign to Halland in the fall of s å, but he does not appear in the correspondence material about it (Pa-ludan-Mtiller). In 1536 he was one of the three members of the Riksdag who, together with a number of other people, sat in court over the conspiracy of some German citizens of Stockholm. o In 1530 he accompanied King Gustav to Finland. A letter from 1532 testifies that K was one of those sent to Lödöse on the occasion of the returned Christian II's conquest of Bohuslän. Like his brother, in 1534 he sat in the court over the leaders of the Bell Rebellion. According to Rasmus Ludvigsson, K participated during the Count's Feud in Johan Turesson's (Tre roros) campaign to Halland in the fall of s å, but he does not appear in the correspondence material about it (Pa-ludan-Mtiller). In 1536 he was one of the three members of the Riksdag who, together with a number of other people, sat in court over the conspiracy of some German citizens of Stockholm. According to Rasmus Ludvigsson, K participated during the Count's Feud in Johan Turesson's (Tre roros) campaign to Halland in the fall of s å, but he does not appear in the correspondence material about it (Pa-ludan-Mtiller). In 1536 he was one of the three members of the Riksdag who, together with a number of other people, sat in court over the conspiracy of some German citizens of Stockholm. According to Rasmus Ludvigsson, K participated during the Count's Feud in Johan Turesson's (Tre roros) campaign to Halland in the fall of s å, but he does not appear in the correspondence material about it (Pa-ludan-Mtiller). In 1536 he was one of the three members of the Riksdag who, together with a number of other people, sat in court over the conspiracy of some German citizens of Stockholm.

Together with Björn Olausson (Lepasätten; vol. 22, p. 579), who was married to a sister of his wife, K traveled in 1537 as a Swedish envoy to Novgorod and Moscow, and they sealed a sixty-year peace treaty in Novgorod. In 1540 he was sent together with Georg Norman and Gabriel Kristersson (Oxenstierna) on a mission to the Master of the Order in Livonia, who however declined the Swedish proposal for a defensive alliance. K was also among the Swedish representatives at the meetings with the Danes in Kalmar in the autumn of 1541 and in Brömsebro in 1541. In 1542 he traveled with Conrad v Pyhy, Sten Eriksson (Leijonhufvud; vol. 22) and Georg Norman to France, where they concluded on behalf of the Swedish a trade or alliance treaty with King Frans I. In 1545 K räfsteting held in Finland together with Johan Olsson (Gyllenhorn; vol. 17, p. 575). However, the border negotiations with the Russians ordered by the king did not take place.

K's seat farm was first his wife's paternal inheritance Norrnäs in Värmdö, Sth, but later his own paternal inheritance Ökna in Flöda, Söd. As fiefs, K in Uppland held Oland's district from the end of the 1520s to about SEK 1540 and Frösåker's district together with Häverö parish from 1542, in Södermanland Villåttinge district and Sköldinge parish from about SEK 1540.

Sources

  • Gustaf Elgenstierna , The introduced genealogical tables of the Swedish nobility. 1925-36.
  • Berglund et al, Om släkten Svinhuvud ursborg (Släktforskärnas årsbok 2008), pp. 9–28; T Berglund and A Winroth, Pig's head and horse's head weapons (Vapenbilden 84, 2010), pp. 4–12; B Boëthius, The Kopparbergslagen until the breakthrough of the 1570s (1965); its, Pig's Head and Pig's Ball (PHT 1966, 3–4); S Carlsson, Estate society and estate persons 1700–1865 (1947); Carpelan, 3 (1965); Diplomatarium Dalekarlicum, 1–3 o supplement (1842–53); The electric trails; H Gillingstam, Svinhuvud och Svinakula (PHT 1966, 1–2); LF Läffler, Some Swedish "talking weapons" (PHT 1903), pp. 77 o 83; BA Nelson, S in Västergötland: some contributions to the genealogy of the family (SoH 1967); J Raneke, Swedish Medieval Weapons, 1 (1982), p 324, o 3 (1985); SMoK; Supplement to The Introduced Swedish Nobility Genealogies, ed C Szabad (2008); PG Vejde,
view all

Agneta Jönsdotter (Svinhufvud)'s Timeline

1330
1330
Nyköping, Södermanland County, Sweden
1430
1430
Stråtenbo, Aspeboda, Falun, Dalarna County, Sweden
1480
1480
Ökna, Floda, Södermanland, Sweden
1494
1494
Age 64
Ökna, Floda, Katrineholm, Södermanland County, Sweden
????
Ökna, Floda, Katrineholm, Södermanland County, Sweden
????
????