Sigvid Sigurdsson Ribbing den Lange/ The Long

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Sigvid Sigurdsson Ribbing den Lange/ The Long

Swedish: Sigvid Sigurdsson Ribbing (Sigvid "Den Lange" Ribbing), Finnish: Sigvid Sigurdsson Ribbing
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Halland County, Sweden
Death:
Immediate Family:

Son of Sigurd Erlingsson Ribbing
Husband of NN
Father of Bengt Sigvidsson Ribbing; Sigvid "The Robber" Ribbing and Knut Sigvidsson Ribbing

Managed by: Johan Lindqvist
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About Sigvid Sigurdsson Ribbing den Lange/ The Long

Sigvid Sigurdsson Ribbing, den Lange/ The Long (nr 15)

  • Son of Sigurd Erlingsson Ribbing
  • Sigvid lived at the year 1290 and is also called Svante in writing. Ribbing Langhe. His estate was called Svanböre. Year 1282, at St. Eriksdag was dubbed Sigvid Ribbing the Long by Magnus Ladulås to "Knights of the Holy Order. Seraphin's Order". He lived in Skåne and built according to history Torstorp's church in Mark i Vastergotland. He was also buried there - and his ribs were hung up in the roof of the church.
  • von Nackreij - Skytte, Volume 3, page 371

Married

  • Married: His wife is Unknown

Children

  • Sigvid Ribbing, i Skane, in Skåne; Called in Anna Bülow's Notice of Old Kindred Seved Ribbing; Where a Välboren lord of Skåne, who lived in 1345, who may have come from Norrige in 1335; Is referred to as a strict and hard man; Considered the ancestor of all Ribbingarne in Sweden, and with him begins his handwritten pedigree across the Ribbingska genus. - Married to Märta Ulfsdotter (Hjorthufvud), in her 1st marriage, born in the year 1320; was about 1353 to 1363 a strict Enlightenment for Queen Margaret in her younger years; † in Norrige and where buried; daughter of the Knight and Svea Reich's Council and the Man of the Nerike Ulf Gudmarsson (Hjorthufvud or Folkunge), to Ulfåsa, who first carried a deer head with a neck, then his the mothers or the Folkungevapnet, a lion, with Brigitta Birgersdotter or Sancta Brita (see Brahe, N: o 1) and remarriage with Knight Knut Algotsson to Hammarö, by the old Grip or Griphufvudslägen.

Sigvid Ribbing, the Long ; Lived in the year 1290

1300. Called in the Pennigsköld Genealogical Collection Svante Ribbinge Langhe to Svanböre, and guessed it
had been by the Danish Ribbingar, which also von Stjernman in his Matric conveys; but von Dalin in his History, part. 2, chap. 6, § 10, in note., says that Sigvid Ribbing was the son of Sigurd Ribbung, Erlingsson, and father of Sigvid Ribbing in Skåne; Thorstorp's church is to be built in Mark in Westergöthland and there lies the grave, and wherever his ribs will hang under the roof. It seems from him or his heirs that King Eric in Denmark in 1302 sentenced Sevedstorp and Tundersjö farms in Södra Halland, which farms King Magnus Smek in Sweden added to Lund's chapter. His son Axel Ribbing, who lived at the year 1350, became the ancestor of the Danish Ribbingar.

Source Swedish nobility's tables / Section 3. von Nackreij - Shooting

Project Runeberg Herrghal

which did not even allow the consumption of meat, had out of necessity brought about a "low"
beer. While Mr. Tule and Åke Rafn enjoyed the well-being of their guests, the priest Lali snuck into a farm located in the neighborhood, where the brothers' servants were staying. They hurried to the monastery, assaulted and killed 6 of Nils Jacobsson's men, imprisoned the others as well as the unarmed chief and the gunmen. The brothers then marched to Hunehals, but when the crew, notwithstanding seeing their commanders in their ranks, could not be persuaded to open the castle gates, they avenged the failed war by ravaging Count Jacob's farms and increasing the number of prisoners with one of his bailiffs. These must later redeem with large sums. Although a Swedish chronicler says that the brothers and the priest were punished with death for this breach of the peace, this is settled by the above-mentioned document, and the priest Lali lived, as we shall show below, at least 7 years after the act of nidings. We have nothing more to say about Mr. Tuli, but Åke Rafn was married to Cecilia, who was still in 1351 in February. lived a widow, "weak in body but healthy in soul" and then makes her will, in which she also remembers several churches in southern Halland. Her children were Skialm Åkesson and her daughters Christina and Helena.

Wapnö has since passed on to the Ribbing family. This old Hallandian The ancestor of the family, the famous Sigurd Erlingsson in Norwegian history, the leader of the Ribbungarne, was already living in Halland in 1220. That the Ribbingar also owned estates in southern Halland at the end of the same century is proved by a still existing document, dat. Vordingborg d. 2 July 1302. Sevith, called Ribbing, had inherited from his brother Arvid both his estate and a trial with the priest, Mr. Knut. After appearing three times in the county council as well as before the king, without any agreement being reached between the disputants, Sevith Ribbing did not appear for the fourth time, although demonstrably called. When he also failed to send a representative to the county council, he was sentenced outlaw by gilkaren in Skåne, Peter Jönesson. It seems from this that this Sevith Ribbing, who in the genealogy of the family is called "the long one", was a Danish subject. He died shortly afterwards. When his heirs did not obey the summons either, although they declared before the king, in Laholm and Halmstad, willing to replace Mr. Knut's power, King Erik Menved ended this lengthy trial, as he on Lord's Day in Vordingborg,

Ribbing Relatives, by the Swedish Biographical Dictionary

Ribbing, originally from Halland with three sea leaves in the coat of arms, two of which were placed above the third. These sea leaves were originally "falling", ie with the tips downwards as well as in the arms of the apparently related family Porses (vol. 29).

The word ribbing means traitor or violent man (Denmark's old Personal Names), which probably explains why a Norwegian rebel party in the early 13th century was called ribbungar; no genealogical connection with its claimants to the throne, as has been claimed, can be proved. The meaning of the word ribbing may be behind the fact that the name R in the 15th century appeared among farmers in Kumla in Närke and among citizens in Arboga.

The earliest name R could be traced back to 1302, when the Danish king Erik "menved" in a judgment letter now known only in later vidimation mentions a "Swith dictus Rybbing "as the brother of a deceased" A rwidus dictus Rybbing "and owner of land in Snöstorp and Tönnersjö in Halland, who was convicted of him. The former has been identified (DAA; Elgenstierna; Mohlin) with a" Seuidus Kanutifilius ", as in his seal bore the above-mentioned coat of arms, when he sold a farm in Halmstad in 1295.

In Sweden, the same coat of arms could not be traced until 1314 to a Sigvid Bengtsson , who appears in letters about forests in Mark's district in Västergötland near the border with Halland. (Liljeholm; Mohlin) have been the father of a Knut Sigvidsson(d at the earliest 1341), who carried the same weapon according to his tombstone in Värnhem's monastery and had ancestral land in Mark's district. His wife Elena Abjörnsdotter (sparre) was the half-sister of the Oxenstierna ancestor, the savior Nils Torstensson (vol. 28, p. 465). He has been identified (Mohlin) with the Knut Sigvidsson who, like his brother Bengt Sigvidsson together with, among others, Knut Porse (vol. 29) in 1325 issued letters of conciliation with the Dutch city of Kampen, in which a common relative of theirs was killed. Sigvid R

became better known(d at the earliest 1345), about whose kinship to their older names no source information has been preserved; according to a German chronicle, he was of the same family as Knut Porse. He was a courtier ("capitaneus") in southern Halland at least 1336–41 - perhaps as guardian of Knut Porse's sons - and married no later than 1341 to Märta Ulfsdotter (Ulvåsa family), St. Birgitta's eldest daughter. Birgitta resembled R to a robber, and according to the Vadstena abbess Margareta Clausdotter's (vol. 25) chronicle of Birgitta's family, he was very harsh and cruel (cf. the meaning of the word ribbing above). Hans and Märta Ulfsdotter's son Peter Sigvidsson (d 1379), usually called Peter R, is mentioned among King Albrekt's followers in the Treaty of Stagnation with King Magnus' followers in 1371. He became councilor in 1375 or 1376, made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1379, wrote his will in Rome and died on the way home in Florence shortly after becoming a knight. R was married to Marshal Karl Ulfsson Tofta half-sister Kristina Ulfsdotter (Sparre Tofta) died childless after having inherited his half-brother (Liedgren) Arvid R's in Upland drowned son Arvid R.

Sigvid Bengtsson and Knut Sigvidssons aforementioned related to Mark's district in Västergötland may indicate a close relationship with the first known district chief there, Knut R (d earliest 1417), who is mentioned as such in 1415. He had in 1402 sealed a market letter together with Peder R(d earliest 1414) and a knight Lindorm R who is not mentioned in life later. It has been claimed (DAA; Hildebrand) that they were brothers, but there is no evidence for this. Since Peder R is mentioned in the letter 1402 before Lindorm R, although he had the title of knight, it seems rather as if Peder was the father of Lindorm and Knut (Liljeholm), especially as the latter could not be substantiated until the 1390s, while Peder R may be identical with the person or persons with this name that appears as early as 1355 and 1364. He is probably also identical with the person who in King Olof's only in transcripts known handwriting 1377 is called Petrus Aaselson - or Axelsson - dictus Rybbing , which combined (DAA; Elgenstierna ; Mohlin) with that of an Ascerus Magni(d earliest 1351) carried the family R's coat of arms and had a brother named Sigvid; in the 1390s, Peder and Knut R sealed for Peter Prika's widow Ingeborg Sigvidsdotter (d earliest 1413), who also carried the family R's coat of arms and was therefore presumed (Liedgren) to have been the daughter of Sigvid Magnusson.

The district chief Knut R was probably (Hildebrand 1961) father-in-law of the knight Broder Svensson (vol. 6) and father of Peder R (d earliest 1474), who was district chief in Mark from some of the years 1442–59 and probably until his death. He came to prepare the social advancement of his descendants by marrying Councilor Bo Stensson's (Night and Day ; vol. 26) daughter Märta. Their son Knut R(d earliest 1512) was warlord in Mark at least from 1484 until his death. His manor was probably Svansjö in Torestorp in this district, which he states to be his farm, when he issued a letter there in 1493, and he sealed a letter there in 1497. As early as 1402, the aforementioned knight Lindorm R had dated a letter there. Knut R's seal is the first in which the R-weapon's nautical blade has received its current appearance, ie with the tips upwards and provided with a shaft (Raneke; cf. Hildebrand, p. 163 f).

In her marriage to Kerstin Gustafsdotter (star), whose mother was an aunt to Councilors Henrik and Peder Erlandsson (Bååt ; vol. 7) and to Councilor Bengt Abjörnsson's (Lilliesparre ; vol. 23) first wife, Knut R became the father-in-law of Severin Kiill(vol. 21, p. 134) and to Gustaf Knutsson (Roos af Hjelmsäter), who in the literature was wrongly identified with his only through family books known and apparently early deceased son Gustaf R.

Gustaf R:'s brother Lindorm R (d. 1521) conducted school studies in Danzig (Gdansk) according to five letters in the Sture Archive in RA from 1506-07 (of which three to Knut R's cousin the head of state Svante Nilsson and one to Knut R). Letters from 1515–17 have been considered (Carlsson 1921; Härenstam) to indicate that he was then the guardian of his servant Sten Sture dy in Sunnerbo and Västbo in Småland. 7 Jan 1521 Christian II wrote in Uppgränna vid Holaveden (Behrmann) on his way back from Sthlm's massacre, that Lindorm R, his brother Per R(d 1521) and a couple of other people rebelled and intended to go to Dalarna (where Gustav Eriksson (Vaasa) was). On 12 January, the king of Jönköping wrote that Ture Jönsson (Three Roses), with the help of the common people, had arrested these insurgents (ST). On 25 January, Kristian had them and their servants beheaded in Jönköping (Rørdam). According to Olavus Petri (vol. 28), two children of the family R. were also executed at the time. A late statement (Anrep), that they would have been sons of Lindorm R and named Lindorm and Gustaf, could not be verified.

Lindorm and Per R's brother Seved R(d 1529 or 1530) was district sheriff in Sunnerbo according to an undated letter, which can probably be dated to around 1507. In the autumn of 1516 he brought to Denmark the Swedish National Council's response to Kristian II's proposal to postpone the planned Swedish-Danish meeting in Halmstad 1517 and Sten Sture's request for rent for the Swedish delegates to this meeting. In April 1523, R came from Denmark to the Bishop of Linköping, Hans Brask(vol. 6) with information that the knighthood and the common people in Skåne would have a meeting on 1 May. The bishop warned the head of state Gustav Eriksson about this, which prompted him to send R to Skåne with a letter, through which Halland and Skåne were urged to surrender under Sweden. In the autumn he became his father's first known successor as district chief in Mark. From 1526, R had most of this district as a grant, but it was withdrawn in 1529 due to his participation in the rebellion of the lords of Västgöta (Carlsson).

Seved R's brother Nils R also took part in this uprising(d about 1580). In 1531 he became his successor as district chief in Mark, which office he then held until his death. In 1533 he exchanged farms in Halland, apparently remnants of his ancestors' estates. When Gustav 1 1550 divided Västergötland into two law sagas, R became one of the two lawmen in Älvsborg County. Like his colleagues, he cannot be proven to have functioned after Gustav I's death, and at least from 1565 there was a subordinate for the whole of Västergötland. In 1554, R was one of Sweden's 15 representatives at the meeting with the Danes in Älvsborg. In the late summer of 1563, he was appointed governor of Jönköping, but it has been doubted that he took up this office (Norborg). Already in the autumn, R was ordered to go to Erik XIV for the war against the Danes, and in 1564 he was active in the defense of Västergötland. His manor was the ancestral Svansjö. R's wife was Councilor Gustaf Olsson's (Stenbock) sister Anna, who is said (Peringskiöld) to have been among the Swedish women that Kristian brought to Denmark after Sthlm's massacre. They became parents-in-lawAnders Persson (Lilliehöök ; vol. 23), Lasse Pedersson (Hård ; vol. 19, p. 581), Brynte Birgersson (Lillie ; vol. 23) and Riksråd Jöran Eriksson (Ulfsparre), who succeeded him as district chief in Mark.

The son of Nils R was, according to a genealogical information that could only be traced in the 18th century to Stiernman, Knut R(d at the earliest 1582) to Torestorp in Valtorp in Västergötland, but JE Almquist claimed without justification that he was the brother of Nils R. According to Erik XIV's tribunal's judgment book, he was, however, the brother of Christoffer R (see below), who already according to contemporaries information (E 8676) was the son of Nils R. Knut R was considered in 1545 by Gustav I to be "too weak" for the bailiff service in Allbo, Kinnevalds, Konga and Norrvidinge district in Småland. In 1547–50, however, he was a bailiff in Möre, where, in the king's opinion, he "tears and tears from the peasants more than to endanger any right to oats". In 1565, R participated in the war against Denmark (Rørdam). In 1582 he was so ill that Duke Charles offered to support him if he ceded his inheritance to the duke.

Knut R's brother Christoffer R (d 1602) was Lars Siggessons (Sparre)bailiff in Vilske district in Västergötland 1545–47, bailiff in the heirlooms in Östergötland 1555–58, bailiff in Redvägs and Frökinds district in Västergötland 1562, ship captain 1563-64 and district chief in Vedens district in Västergötland 15–9090. His manor was for a time Karstorp (now Ribbingstorp) in Naum in Västergötland but later Limma-red in Tranemo in the same landscape. His son (Genealogica; Almquist 1958) was Arue R (d at the earliest 1590), who after activities as a chamberlain to Duke Karl by him in 1587 was recommended to serve with his nephew Sigismund. He is said (Marks v Würtenberg) to have been buried in Danzig (Gdansk). His brother (Marks v Würtenberg) chamberlain Mauritz R(d earliest 1609) followed Sigismund to Poland in 1587 (Str hist handl), belonged in 1591 to his sister Anna's courtiers (RKB) and lived in 1609 with Sigismund in Poland. Their half-sister Anna R became the mother of Councilor Erik Gyllenstierna (vol. 17, p. 591).

The later members of the family descend from Seved, Lindorm, Per and Nils R's younger brother Sven R (d 1577) to Fästered in Finnekumla in Västergötland, who in the last years of his life was district chief in Västra härad in Småland. In his marriage to Erik XIV's chief chamberlain Bengt Gyltas(vol. 17) Sister Anna, he had nine sons and six daughters, whose date of birth he reported in a record (known from transcripts from the late 17th century in Biographica, a little R, vol 13, RA, and in the Palmskiöld collection, vol 235, UUB).

One of them was Gustaf R (1548–92). According to Erik XIV's tribunal's judgment book, he was sentenced in 1566 - still only 18 years old - to death for escaping from his service with the king. Earlier, he had forgiven him for killing one of the king's servants. 5 Jan 1567 accused R in front of Jöran Persson, among others(vol. 20) several of the nobility's foremost men, including Svante Sture, for stamping against the king. According to a later manifesto against Erik XIV (Autumn 1888), this information, which became the prelude to the Sture murders, must have been forced through torture. The death sentence was not carried out, as it is known that R in the 1580s lived on Svansö in Bottnaryd in Småland. He, however, unmarried.

His older brother Bänckth R (1541-94) to Främmestad in Söne in Västergötland is mentioned in 1564–65 among the king's little friends, in 1566 among his chamberlains and in 1572 as deputy court marshal. In the autumn of 1568 he was appointed to assist the governor of Kalmar Anders Persson (Lilliehöök; bd 23) and himself became chief commander there in 1573, which he was also in 1574 and 1579–83, at least in the last years with the title of governor (Löningsreg). When Johan III in 1590, after dismissing the main members of the Riksdag, supplemented this, R became his family branch's first Riksråd together with his wife Britta Gabrielsdotter's (Oxenstierna) brother Gustaf Gabrielsson (vol. 28, p. 472) - Axel Oxenstierna's father - and Jöran Posse Knutsson (vol. 29), who was married to another sister of Gustaf Gabrielsson. Bänckth R also became the successor of the deposed Erik Sparre as lawyer in Västmanland and Dalarna. At the border meeting with the Danes in Flabäck in Lindome in Halland in 1591, R was one of the Swedish delegates together with his brother-in-law Christiern Gabrielsson (Oxenstierna; bd 28, p. 470) and uncle Nils R's son-in-law Jöran Eriksson (Ulfsparre). When Johan III died in the autumn of 1592, R, like the brothers-in-law, was among the six councilors who were in Sthlm and together with Duke Karl came to form an interim government and brought about reconciliation between him and the deposed councilors. In the early summer of 1594, Sigismund sent him and Ture Bielke (vol. 4) to the Duke of Nyköping to urge him to come to Sthlm, but to no avail. After R's death a couple of weeks later, a rumor spread, which was considered to originate from Councilor Erik Gustafsson (Stenbock) , that the death would have been caused by Duke Karl having abused him. In his calendar, Karl described him in connection with the death as "an indomitable man".

Bänckth and Gustaf R's youngest brother was Boo R(1560–1640). The pedigree information spread in the literature, that in childhood he was considered "insane and a fool" and at the inheritance after the parents only received "an old coat", could not be substantiated until around 1800 (Marks v Würtenberg). At least from the autumn of 1586 (SRA), R was active for Duke Karl, but he could not be found in the lists of his court lieutenants until 1587 (RKB). From 1591 until his death, he was district chief in Vadsbo district, which was part of Charles' duchy. Stiernman's information spread through the genealogies in the literature, that R 3 May 1593 would have become lawman in Värmland, must be a misconception, because in the duke's power of attorney for him from this date it says that he was appointed commander in Värmland and Dalsland. It is also clear from the title of this power of attorney that the literature task, which was also disseminated through the genealogical tablets, that he had become a member of Duke Karl's princely council the year before, could not be correct. R's power of attorney as governor of Kalmar in 1599 does not seem to have yielded results, because the duke's letter to him in the following years testifies that he continued to function in Värmland and Dalsland until 1606, when he became governor of Närke. Prior to that, he appeared in the 1602 Riksdag decision among the six courts of appeal mentioned alongside the Riksdag (Eden 1901). The difference between the two council corporations soon disappeared, and from 1605 R is mentioned as national councilor (Eden 1902), earliest in the power of attorney by which he became one of the five Swedish commissioners in the negotiations with the Russians at Systerbäck, which was interrupted by the tsar's death. Later he was from 1612 governor of Värmland with Vadsbo and Valle district in Västergötland, until the duchy ended by Duke Karl Filips (vol. 20) died in 1622. In the autumn of 1623 R was among the councilors who served in Svea Court of Appeal, 1624-27 he was governor again in Värmland. He was also one of the Swedish delegates at the failed meeting with the Danes in Wismar in 1608 and at the border meetings with them in 1619 and 1624 (AOSB 1: 2). In 1632, R is mentioned as "decrepitus senex" (powerless old man), who mostly lay in bed due to age (AOSB 2: 3, p. 269 and 275), but even in February and March 1633 he was, the then Swedish councilor, present at Council meetings. His manor was Säby in Visnum in Värmland. In the autumn of 1623, R was among the councilors who served in the Svea Court of Appeal, in 1624–27 he was again governor of Värmland. He was also one of the Swedish delegates at the failed meeting with the Danes in Wismar in 1608 and at the border meetings with them in 1619 and 1624 (AOSB 1: 2). In 1632, R is mentioned as "decrepitus senex" (powerless old man), who mostly lay in bed due to age (AOSB 2: 3, p. 269 and 275), but even in February and March 1633 he was, the then Swedish councilor, present at Council meetings. His manor was Säby in Visnum in Värmland. In the autumn of 1623, R was among the councilors who served in the Svea Court of Appeal, in 1624–27 he was again governor of Värmland. He was also one of the Swedish delegates at the failed meeting with the Danes in Wismar in 1608 and at the border meetings with them in 1619 and 1624 (AOSB 1: 2). In 1632, R is mentioned as "decrepitus senex" (powerless old man), who mostly lay in bed due to age (AOSB 2: 3, p. 269 and 275), but even in February and March 1633 he was, the then Swedish councilor, present at Council meetings. His manor was Säby in Visnum in Värmland. who mostly lay in bed due to age (AOSB 2: 3, pp. 269 and 275), but even in February and March 1633 he, the then largest member of the Swedish National Council, was present at council meetings. His manor was Säby in Visnum in Värmland. who mostly lay in bed due to age (AOSB 2: 3, pp. 269 and 275), but even in February and March 1633 he, the then largest member of the Swedish National Council, was present at council meetings. His manor was Säby in Visnum in Värmland.

Bänckth, Gustaf and Boo R's brother Erik R (1558–1612) is mentioned as court lieutenant 1584–87 and was from 1586 until his death district chief in Redvägs härad in Västergötland. In 1587 he followed Sigismund to Poland (Str hist handl), where he could be occupied in Kraköw in 1588 (Skoklostersaml) and in Warsaw in 1589 (E 6117) and 1590 (Y52). In 1595, R participated in the Riksdag in Söderköping, after which he, together with Karl Henriksson (Horn ; vol. 19) and Sven Månsson (Somme), were sent to seek to obtain the accession of the Finnish estates to its decision. In 1600 he was among the assistants in the court that sentenced the captured councilors in Linköping, and when the Riksrådet was reorganized in 1602, he became a member of the same, and in 1605 he became a lawyer in Tiohärad. After R's wife Emerentia Gyllenstierna's uncleHogenskild Bielkes(vol. 4) execution 1605 he received in 1607 a large part of his confiscated goods, including the manor Dala (now Stora Dala) in Västergötland. He was one of the six Swedish delegates at the border meeting with the Danes in Flabäck in 1603. The earliest information given around 1800 (Marks v Würtenberg) that R was "laid dll Denmark 1611" and would have died "on the return journey" from there, however, should be incorrect. He cannot be said to have taken part in the preparations for the peace treaty of 1613. According to R's tombstone in Dala church, he was Västergötland's "landlord". His manor was Svansö in Bottnaryd, which previously belonged to his brother Gustaf. In 1620, R's widow published his Grundelige betänkiande om thet wederstyggelige och fördömlige drunkenness, a translation of a work by the German priest Johannes Colerus. His son Benchtt R (1609–53) at Dala participated in the Thirty Years' War and was colonel of Älvsborg's regiment 1642–45 and governor of Jönköping County 1645–53. His daughter Emerentia marriedHenrik Horn (vol. 19) mother-in-law of Carl Nieroth (vol. 26).

Bänckth, Gustaf, Erik and Boo R's brother the treasurer Seved R (R 1) became the father-in-law of Karl Karlsson Gyllenhielm (vol. 17), who formed the future manor Ribbingelund in Kjula in Södermanland, and of Duke Karl Filip (vol. 20) and father of Nils R(1590–1641). He, who was also a cousin of the aforementioned Benchtt R, participated in the war against Poland and was colonel of Älvsborg's regiment 1624–35, district chief in Vartofta district in Västergötland from 1627 until his death and castle captain or governor of Kalmar 1635–39. In Kalmar, the citizens complained that he assaulted them with blows, blows and insults, when they demanded payment from him for work and goods. Finally, he escaped with his family across the border into Denmark. His manor was the ancestral Fästered.

His nephew Linnardt R (1631–97), who signed up for Linnardt R Suensonto be distinguished from his nephew Baron Lennart R Persson (see below), his aunt's husband Karl Karlsson was Gyllenhielm's foster son (AOSB). Linnardt R was appointed governor of Gotland in 1666, which was one of Queen Kristina's maintenance countries, but came into conflict with her tenant Jacob Momma, noble Reenstierna(vol. 29). His complaint against him caused the queen to depose R, who was reinstated by Charles XI's guardian but in 1673 was again dismissed by Kristina. In 1675 he became a member of the Commission of Inquiry into the Administration of the Guardian Government. The genealogical information that R would have become colonel in 1675 and commander in Gbg in 1677, is due to confusion with Lennart R Persson (see his personalities in Biographica). From 1686 until his death he was a lawyer in Kalmar County (after his nephew; see below). R had inherited, among other things, the manors Harlinge in Bettna in Södermanland, which he sold in the early 1680s, and Ribbingsnäs (formerly Skinnarebo) in Barkeryd in Småland and founded at Spatorp in Kila in Södermanland the manor Leonardsberg named after him. His grandson was Leonard Kagg (vol. 20, p. 562).

His brother Thure R (1619–56) on the mother-inherited Grensholmen in Östra Skrukeby (now Vånga) in Östergötland was captured in the Thirty Years' War in 1640, was appointed commander in Varberg in 1646 and was after his father-in-law Hans Kyle (vol. 21, p. 737) governor in Ostrobothnia 1650–54. His son Sven R Thureson (1652–1711) was a lawyer in Kalmar County with Öland 1682–86 and then until his death in Östergötland. He owned it after an uncle named Ribbingsholm (formerly Hallestad) in Kullerstad in Östergötland. He sold Grensholmen in 1706. The

family's still surviving branches come from R 1's and Bänckth, Gustaf, Erik and Boo R's brother Peer R(1544–1604) at Ulvsnäs in Öggestorp in Småland. He is mentioned among the king's little friends in 1562–65 and among his chamberlains in 1566 and was one of those to whom the guarding of the imprisoned Erik XIV was entrusted at Gripsholm in 1572–73 and at Örbyhus in 1575. In 1577 R was authorized to act in the castle law at Vadstena, where he previously been active at least 1566-68 and later can be proved 1578, 1579 and 1581, was authorized to be in the castle law 1589 and was governor 1603. In between he was appointed in the castle law on Kalmar 1591. He was also district chief, especially from 1578 until his death in Tveta district in Småland. In 1600, R, like his brothers R 1 and Erik, was among the assistants in the court in Linköping over the captured councilors, and from 1602 until his death he was a lawyer in Tiohärad, where he was succeeded by his brother Erik. R:

In marriage to Knut Håkansson's (Hand ; vol. 18) niece Märta Jönsdotter (Oxehufvud) he became the father of Linnorm R (1569–1627). He is mentioned among Johan III's courtiers in 1592. Duke Karl used him as a transmitter of letters to Sigismund after his return to Sweden in 1598. R was therefore in the latter's camp during the battle of Lilla Stångebro, where he stopped with a fictitious order from Sigismund his noble fanas attack. Several letters from Karl testify that R, at least from March, was connected to Sigismund's still barely nine-year-old and already ill half-brother Duke Johan(vol. 20). From 1603 he is mentioned as his foreman, and according to the decision of the Norrköping Riksdag in 1604, he, like his brother R 1, was one of the four nobles who would assist Johan with advice and deeds. In 1605, R in his duchy of Östergötland became commander in Vadstena castle county, where he is mentioned from 1606 with the title of governor, and in 1608 Johan authorized him to be governor of the entire duchy. In 1612 he became a lawyer in Östergötland, and from the autumn he calls him in his letters (E 5156) councilor and governor. After Duke Johan's death in 1618, R again became governor only in Vadstena castle county, but in 1621 his area was increased to include the whole of Östergötland. In 1623 he became national councilor, and like his uncle Boo R he was among the Swedish delegates at the border meeting with the Danes in 1624. R:

In marriage to Councilor Carl Bonde's (vol. 5) sister Märta, he became the father-in-law of Councilors Lars Kagg (vol. 20), Carl Mörner (vol. 26) and Johan Rosenhane and father of Per Linnormson R (1606–64). The latter took part in Gustav II Adolf's Polish war and the Thirty Years' War and was promoted in 1638 to colonel of Skaraborg's regiment. After garrison service in Wismar 1638–41 and participation in Torstensson's campaign 1642 and Gustaf Horns(vol. 19) Scanian campaigns, he was 1648–63 governor (title 1661 changed to governor) in Älvsborg county and commander-in-chief in Gbg. R became councilor in 1654 and councilor of appeal in Svea in 1663, and in 1654 he was elevated to baronial status. His family branch in the house of knights has been called R of Zernava , according to information (Elgenstierna) after the estate Czarnowo near the city of Torun in Poland, which he is said to have received in 1656 by Karl X Gustav. R's most important manor house in Sweden was Boxholm in Ekeby in Östergötland. Of two farms in Berga (now Kyleberg) in Svanshals in Östergötland, he formed a manor, which for a time was called Ribbingsberga.

In his marriage to the national councilor Hans Åkesson's (Soop) granddaughter Christina Ryning, he became the father of Lennart (Leonhardt) R (1638–87), sometimes calledLennart R Persson to be distinguished from his father's aforementioned contemporary occupation Linnardt R Suenson. He became chamberlain to Queen Kristina in 1652 and participated in Karl X Gustav's Polish and Danish wars and his aunt's husband Lars Kagg's (vol. 20) siege of Halden in Norway 1659–60. R became in 1675 colonel of the Widow Queen's livery regiment on foot, participated in 1677 in the battle of Landskrona and became so (until 1678) commander in Gbg, 1680 member of the Reduction Commission for Småland and 1683 governor of "Gävleborg and Norrland" (except Västerbotten county). His main manor was the mother-inherited Gimmersta in Julita in Södermanland.

In marriage with Councilor Conrad v Falkenberg's (vol. 15) daughter Catharina, R became father to Pehr R (R 2) and toGustaf R (1673–1711). The latter participated in the French army's campaigns in Flanders 1696–97 and Charles XII's campaigns. He died unmarried in Bender after being promoted to colonel of Uppland's regiment in 1710.

R 2's and Gustaf R's brother Gabriel R(1679–1742) was transferred in 1702 from the garrison regiment in Stade to Charles XII's Polish war, during which he in a battle in 1704 had the horse shot under him. After the Battle of Poltava, he, like his brother Gustaf Charles XII, followed him to Turkey, from where he was sent home to Sweden in 1712 to take over the leadership of the newly destroyed Life Guards, which almost destroyed the Battle of Poltava and the capitulation at Perevolotjna. During the voyage across the Baltic Sea, however, R was captured by the Danes and taken to Khvn but released in 1713. After trying as much as possible to follow Charles XII's orders regarding the new formation, R 1717 became major general and was 1717-21 commander of Östgöta infantry regiment. During the Norwegian campaign in 1718, he was responsible for the reception and distribution of the provisions. R was promoted to lieutenant general in 1720 and in 1732 was one of those discussed as candidates for the presidency of the War College and in 1739 one of the 14 people who refused to become councilor after the hats licensed by the hats. Despite the fact that he inherited Fjällskäfte in Floda in Södermanland and through his marriage withRobert Douglas' (vol. 11) granddaughter Ulrika Eleonora Oxenstierna 1712 came into possession of Edsberg in Sollentuna in Uppland and after the brother R 2 got Ulvåsa in Ekebyborna in Östergötland, he lived mainly on the ancestral Boxholm. R had a son and nine daughters and became the father-in-law of Johan Mauritz Banér (vol. 2, p. 633), Göran Gyllenstierna (vol. 17, p. 593), Anders Johan v Höpken (vol. 19), Adolph Mörner (vol. 26, p. 292) and his nephew Pehr R (see below).

R 2's and Gustaf and Gabriel R's brother Lennardt R(1676–1732) took part in the battle of Kliszów in 1702 but was dismissed from his position as cavalry master in 1706 (not 1701) due to illness. He later became adjutant general to Stanislaw Leszynski, took part in the battles of Holowczyn and Poltava, took part in a Turkish war train into Russia 1710-11 and was captured at the calamity in Bender in 1713 but was released, after which he returned to Sweden via Hungary and Germany. and participated in the Norwegian campaign in 1718. In 1719 R bought his parents-in-law's estate Hörningsholm in Mörkö in Södermanland and in 1730 sold the mother-inherited Vibyholm in the same province. In his marriage to Gustaf Adolf Levenhaupt's (vol. 22) granddaughter Elsa Elisabet Banér, he became the father of Gustaf R (R 3) and Catharina Charlotta R (1720–87), married toCharles de Geer (vol. 10) and one of the first in the Swedish upper class to have smallpox vaccinated her children, which led to a medal being struck over her in 1756; she was the mother of Gustav III's youth love Charlotte de Geer, married to the governor Anders Rudolf Du Rietz (vol. 11). R 3's brother Pehr R (1717–1802) took part in the war in Finland 1741–42 and in the Prussian army's campaign in Bohemia 1745, was wounded in the Pomeranian war, was promoted to lieutenant colonel in 1766 and was dismissed major general in 1773. His manor was Götvik in Ekeby in Östergötland, which he came into possession of through his marriage to his uncle Gabriel R's daughter Elsa Ebba.

R 2's and Gustaf, Lennardt and Gabriel R's brother Conradt R(1671–1736) was lame since childhood due to a grandmother's negligence, so he could not become an officer like his father and most of his brothers but became after study trips on the European continent 1691–95 and auscultating in Svea Court of Appeal assessor there 1705 , member of the commission for certain self-interest investigations in Västergötland and Bohuslän 1710 and lawyer in Halland 1712. He was also deputy governor of Östergötland 1711–13, in Södermanland 1714 and Västmanland 1715–16. Charles XII's court reform made R a lawyer in Sthlm County in 1718, and so he and his brother R 2 got the two newly established ordinances. Together with him, he had long before worked for the abolition of autocracy. After the king's death, R, like his brother, was a member of the Goertz Commission(vol. 17) and played a prominent role alongside his brother in the Riksdag in 1719. In 1719–29 he was governor of Närkes and Värmland counties. However, relations with the Chancellor's President Arvid Horn (vol. 19) deteriorated (Höpken), and R's Riksdag candidacy was unsuccessful in either 1719 or 1727, despite his reputation for great ability (Reuterholm, pp. 47 and 49). As an influential member of the 1723 Placement Deputation for enlistment and relocation of officers, he made many enemies. From 1731 until his death, R was president of Bergskollegium. R's main manor was the Gimmersta inherited from his parents. In his marriage to the Admiral Gustaf Otto Stenbock's granddaughter Ebba Charlotta Douglas he became the father of a son who in marriage to his uncle Lennardt R's daughter Ebba Margareta became the grandfather ofPeder Fredrik R (1820–82). Peder R participated in the Danish-German war 1848–49 and was promoted in Swedish service to lieutenant colonel in 1868. With him, the baronial branch of R af Zernava died out on the male side.

One of the two still surviving family branches originates from Per Linnormson R's half- uncle Cristoffer R (1583–1655) at Ulvsnäs who was the nephew of Councilors Jöran and Hans Erikssöner (Ulfsparre). He became an assessor in the Svea Court of Appeal in 1619 and was governor of Kalmar 1620–21 and in Kronoberg County 1626–28 and deputy lawyer in Tiohärad 1624–25 and 1631–41. His son Colonel Arffved R (1620–78) at Ulvsnäs married the major general and governor Casper Otto Sperling's daughter Anna Margareta father of Lennardt R(1654–1733), which was sometimes (M 1142) called Lennardt R Arfwedson to be distinguished from several names. He was severely wounded in the battle of Lund in 1676 and was 1709–14 colonel of the Queen's livery regiment on foot, with which he was stationed in Stralsund. Autobiographical notes of him can be found in a Charles XII Bible in LUB (cf. Hildebrand). His nephew Major Carl Christopher R (1710–93) made the father-inherited Ulvsnäs a fideicommissary in 1779.

Carl R's brother became the grandfather of Sigurd R (R 6). His uncle was the district chief in Tveta, Vista and Mo in Småland Pehr Arwid R (1794–1865). Arwid R was the father of the artist Sophie Amalia R(1835–94). Sophie R joined the Swedish painting school in Düsseldorf in the 1860s, continued her studies in Paris and Brussels and lived in Rome in the 1870s. She became best known as a portrait painter, and her self-portrait hangs in the Uffizi, Florence. Her niece was Elsa Hildegard Augusta R (1875–1935). Elsa R was for a few years a teacher in Jönköping's and Skövde elementary schools for girls and published 1906 and 1908 a couple of poetry collections and 1909–20 popular science biographies of famous people such as C v Linné and Florence Nightingale.

R 6's and Sophie R's cousin Erling R(1831–93) became chamberlain to Princess Eugenie in 1859, steward of her affairs in 1877 and cabinet chamberlain in 1879, was promoted in the army to colonel in 1886 and became governor of Ulriksdals and Haga lustslott in 1891 (acting 1885). In his marriage to the governor Gustaf Lagerbjelke d ys (vol. 22) sister Antoinette Christina, he was the father of Bengt Axel Eugéne R (1859–1935). Axel R accompanied Prince Carl on his voyage to India, Palestine and Syria in 1884–85 and in 1889 became an ordained officer with him, whose adjutant he was from 1897 until his death. He was head of the riding school at Strömsholm 1903-06 and colonel of the Scanian Hussar Regiment 1907–12.

Erling R's older brother was Lieutenant Colonel Peder Arvid R(1827–1906) at Riddersberg in Rogberga in Småland. Arvid R had six sons and three daughters who survived him. The oldest of these children was Bengt Carl Arvid R (1863–1927). Bengt R became colonel of Västerbotten's regiment in 1915 and was colonel of Bohuslän's regiment 1921–23. His youngest brother, Nils Arvidsson R(1878–1952), graduated from KTH 1904, was 1911–21 the state naval engineer in southern and central Sweden and conducted under the company name R: s ingenjörsbyrå consulting activities within the naval and water construction union in Orsa 1911–15, in Falun 1915–30 and thereafter in Sthlm until 1950. He took the initiative and prepared proposals for the fleet channel channel decided by the Riksdag from Dalälven by Marma past Älvkarleby waterfall to Västlandsfjärden by the Baltic Sea and from 1935 was the Domain Board's inspector for this work. In Falun, R was vice chairman of the Dalarna Orchestra Association 1919–30, member of the City Council 1927–30 and chairman of the Falun Music Society 1929–30. Brother of Bengt and Nils R was the landowner Erling Magnus R (1870–1949) at Nynäs in Ekeby in Närke. Erling R became the father ofSigwid (Sigge) Gustaf Adolf R (1905–82). Sigge R graduated from KTH in 1929, was chief engineer for Sthlm's tramways' railway and construction department in 1940-61, was promoted to lieutenant colonel in the Road and Water Construction Corps in 1958, was a consultant for the reorganization of Nigerian Railways in 1961, had a UN mission to arrange traffic in Caracas, Venezuela, 1961–62, was CEO of ab Trafikkonsult from 1964 and presented proposals for traffic systems for Lima, Peru, 1966. His brother was Arvid Fredrik R (1908–81). In 1952, Arvid R became an appellate court adviser in the Svea Court of Appeal and head of the Ministry of Agriculture's legal department and in 1961 district chief in Sollentuna and Färentuna jurisdiction and was a lawyer in the Svea Court of Appeal 1966-75.

Brother of Peder Arvid R and Erling R then Carl Christoffer R(1826–99). Carl R took over Ulvsnäs' fideicommissary in 1866, was chairman of Jönköping County's household association 1871–76 and member of parliament in FK 1871–79, was promoted to military major in 1876 and became court marshal in 1883. His youngest son was Seved Gustaf Lindorm R(1862–1918). Gustaf R became a lic at 1895 and from 1896 was a general practitioner in Örebro, where he gained a reputation as a prominent eye specialist. In 1904 he graduated as a Turkish doctor in Constantinople (Istanbul), after which he worked as the Jerusalem Society's missionary doctor in Bethlehem. After a short visit to Sweden, R was prevented by the outbreak of war in 1914 from returning to Bethlehem, after which he was a hospital assistant physician in Örnsköldsvik and from 1915 a general practitioner in Halmstad. R died of meningitis, caused by Spanish flu. In marriage to Professor Teodor Nordling's (vol. 27) daughter Elsa, he became the father of Dag R(1898–1980). He graduated from KTH in 1921 and studied at the Academy of Fine Arts 1924–26. In 1925–65, he was employed at the Cooperative Union's architect's office, and his life's work coincided with the cooperative's expansive construction phase, especially during the expansion of the Domus department stores around the country. In addition, R had a significant private architectural business, which resulted in city hotels, school buildings and student hotels. With solid knowledge and artistic taste, he used natural stone and brick. For more than 20 years, R was also secretary of Sthlm's Philatelic Association.

Dag R's uncle Lieutenant Colonel Bo R (1858–1936) married Gunnar Mascoll Silfverstolpe 's aunt Anna Augusta father of Bo Herbert Bosson R(1897–1985). Herbert R graduated from the School of Business, Economics and Law in Sthlm in 1918 and in Uppsala with a bachelor's degree in 1919 and a law degree in 1921. After serving in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Paris, London, Baltics and Hfors, he became bureau chief in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1936 (acting 1934). 1941 and envoys in Mexico and other countries in Central America in 1943 and in Argentina and Paraguay in 1949, with the title of ambassador from 1957. In 1958–63, R was ambassador to Spain. On behalf of the UN, he was a mediator in a conflict between Saudi Arabia and Oman in 1960, after which he was allowed to investigate the sovereignty of the sultanates of Muscat and Oman in 1963. In 1966–68, R mediated on behalf of the UN in a malicious border dispute between Thailand and Cambodia. His brother was the pianist Professor Stig R (b. 1904), married to the singer Maria R, f Edenhofer (f 1911).

The other of the two surviving branches of the genus R is descended from Cristoffer R's older brother Erich R (1577–1623). He participated on Sigismund's side in the battles against Duke Karl in 1598 but can from 1600 be classified as district chief in Sevede district in Småland and was Karl's chamberlain, when he in 1605 donated to him the exile in Poland Axel Posses (vol. 29, p. 422) manor Ro i Mellby in Västergötland. Gustav II Adolf used R for the collection of Älvsborg's ransom in Västmanland. Through his marriage to Peder Hanssons (Forstenasläkten) dy: s (vol. 16, p. 382) daughter Anna, he came to have Vargarn in Lista in Södermanland as a manor. The newly formed manors Ribbingshov (formerly Vi) in Norra Vi in Östergötland and Ribbingsfors (formerly Toketorp) in Södra Härene and Ribbingsfors (formerly Hulestad) in Amnehärad, both in Västergötland, have been named after him by his son-in-law Carl Sigg. Rosendufva) and Harald Posse (vol. 29, p. 425 f) and Svante Horn, respectively. Erich R's grandson Johan R (d 1700) participated in the 1670s war in both Pomerania and Skåne and was promoted to colonel 1677 and major general 1700 a few months before he fell in the battle of Narva.

Married to her niece Christina Maria Mörner, daughter of Councilor Carl Mörner(vol. 26) and granddaughter of Councilor Linnorm R (see above), he became the father of Bengt R (1686–1741), occasionally (Frih: letter) called Bengt Johansson R to be able to be separated from his father's cousin Bengdt R Gustafsson (see below). He accompanied Charles XII to Turkey, participated in the defense of Stralsund and became colonel in 1715, commander in Gbg in 1719 and major general, governor in Gbg and Bohus counties and commander in chief in Gbg and Bohus in 1730. In 1731 he was elevated to baronial status. R's descendants at Riddarhuset have been called R af Kobergafter a manor in Lagmansered in Västergötland, which he bought in 1724. In 1738–39 he was border commissioner in the preparations for determining the border between Sweden and Norway. In 1739, R, like his motherly occupation and paternal marriage, Gabriel R (see above) was among the 14 people who refused to become councilor after the hats licensed by the hats.

In her marriage to Carl Piper's (vol. 29) daughter Ulrika Eleonora, R became the grandfather of President Clas Arvid Kurck (vol. 21, p. 696) and father of Carl R(1718–73). He participated in the Pomeranian War but became best known there as one of the officers who left the army to participate in the Riksdag 1760-62. However, he was promoted to colonel and commander in Landskrona in 1762 and became commander in Kalmar in 1765. From 1766, R envoy was in Russia but was suspected of having too good relations with the Russian court to inform the Swedish government of what he learned about Russian armor. (cf. vol. 27, p. 29). Upon his resignation in 1773, he received so much money from Catherine II that he was able to pay his debts. R was then promoted to major general and governor of Uusimaa and Hämeenlinna counties but died in St. Petersburg before returning home. His brother Councilor Fridrich R (R 4) became Count in 1778.1 his marriage to Councilor Axel Löwens(vol. 24) daughter Eva Helena, Arvid Horns (vol. 19) granddaughter, this father became Adolph Ludvig R (R 5), who as a refugee called himself de Leuven after his maternal lineage. With his son, the French theater writer Adolphe de Leuven (1802-84), the noble family branch died out.

Johan R's uncle Gustaf R Erichsson (1613–93) was 1642–51 assessor in the Svea Court of Appeal and 1663–72 governor of Jönköping County, to which in 1669 and 1670 parts of Kronoberg County were transferred. He lived on the mother-inherited Österby in Tumbo in Södermanland but also owned Bred in Skogs-Tibble in Uppland, which during his time became a manor and after him was named Ribbingebäck. Hans son Zachris R(d 1676) fell in the battle of Lund. He could not have become colonel in 1675, as the genealogies state, because his widow Maria Skytte, a granddaughter of Councilor Johan Skytte, mentions him after his death as a lieutenant colonel (Biographica). Zachris R's brother Gustaf R Gustafsson (1637–91) participated in Karl X Gustav's Polish and Danish wars, distinguished himself in the battle of Lund in 1676 and became colonel in 1680 and commander of Kalmar Castle in 1687.

Another brother was Bengdt R (d. 1722 ), who sometimes (M 1142) called himself Bengdt R Gustafsson in contrast to his cousin Bengt Johansson R. He was colonel of Jämtland's dragon regiment 1705–10. One of his grandsons married Gustaf Abraham Pipers(vol. 29, p. 320) daughter Eva Augusta, whereby one copy of his autobiography ended up in the R: ska principals' archive (cf. PHT 1934, p. 6, note 15). Their son Boo Gustaf R (1785–1850) became a master in Uppsala in 1812, a theologian in 1815, a theologian in 1817, a court preacher and parish priest in Stora Mellösa in Närke in 1828, a pastor in 1829 and a theologian in 1831.

One of his half-brothers married the bishop Carl Edvard Taube's daughter Maria Eleonora, among other things, a son, who in marriage with his seven-year-old sister R 6's sister Hedvig Maria R became the father of Seved R (R 7). His son Lännart R (1876–1938) was one of the four who founded the radical student association DYG (The Younger Old Man) in Lund in 1896. He became one of Bengt Lidforss'closest friends, published four collections of poems during the years 1909 and 1926–31 and was a literary critic in Lunds Dagblad in 1918-20. After a dissertation in 1907 at StH on the dissertation Die dichte Armmuskulatur der Amphibien, Reptilien und Säugetiere, R s å fil dr and in 1909 became an associate professor in comparative anatomy in Lund, where he also taught zoology, ethnography and cultural history. From 1922 until his death he was professor of anatomy at the Academy of Fine Arts in Sthlm.

R 7: s brother Gustaf R(1849–1942) was promoted in the Svea Court of Appeal to the Court of Appeal in 1898 and was ombudsman 1897–98, district chief in Uppsala County's northern court saga 1900–19, chairman of the commission regarding electric light and power lines 1898–1900, in the probate charter committee 1906–11 and in Uppsala City Council 1910–14 and chief guardian in Uppsala 1924–32. In 1907 he became jur honorary dr. As a judge, R had a rare ability to, with his extensive knowledge, get to grips with all actual issues and during a negotiation process perceive the essentials of a legal dispute (Benckert). In his marriage to Carolina Sofia Meyer, daughter of the publisher Philipp Joel Meyer (vol. 25, p. 469), he became the father of Seved R (R 8).

R 7's and Gustaf R's brother Lennart R(1847–1924) defended his dissertation in 1874 in Uppsala on the 18th century author Olof Bergklint(vol. 3) and was promoted to PhD in 1875. After teaching at various schools in Sthlm, he was a colleague in Christianity, mother tongue, history and geography at Östermalm's educational institution in 1890–96, and from 1897 he occasionally taught at Djursholm's co-educational school. R published a translation and adaptation of the Norwegian Volrath Vogt's biblical history (2 editions 1891 and 1894), after which he published Biblical history on the basis of Volrath Vogt's biblical history (9 editions 1899–1924). He also published Odysseus' return journey. Selection from Homer's poem. Reading book for the lower classes of general education (1896), Selection from Herodotus' historical books. Reading book for young people (1903), Reading book for the Swedish folk school, 1–4 (1907–13), Biblical stories for the small school (2 editions 1908 and 1919) and Life pictures and reflections. Sunday reading for children and young people (1924).

His son Sigurd R (1879–1934) became bureau chief in the Medical Board in 1914, vice chairman of the State Central Arbitration Board in 1920 and chairman there in 1922 and was state secretary in the Ministry of Social Affairs 1923–30 with the exception of the years 1926–28, when he was consultative minister in Carl Ekmans (vol. 13) first minister. From 1930 he was director general of the National Insurance Institute, and from 1932 he was also chairman of the State Organizing Committee.

His younger brother Olof R(1887–1964) was a teacher of war history and strategy at the Finnish War College 1924–27 and of war history at the War Academy in Sthlm 1928–35 and a member of the International Federation of Nations' Committee for the Evacuation of Volunteers in Spain 1938–39. In 1918–19 he participated in the preparation of the General Staff's work Karl XII on the battlefield, and in 1921–23 he undertook study trips to the Baltics and Poland for the General Staff's war Sweden 1111–32. In 1941, R was promoted to colonel and head of the Armed Forces' Department of War History, whose work with, among other things, the publication of writings about the 1640s war in Germany he led to 1950.

His second wife was from 1934 Gerda (Gerd) Anna Sofia R, f Rehn(1889–1979). She was educated in 1907–10 at the Higher Teachers' Seminary but never taught but became a housewife through marriage in 1912 with the lawyer Olof Waern. After the divorce in 1926, R was employed by DN in 1932–66, where she edited family news and wrote daily kåserier under the signature Joy and the headline På stan and from 1937 with the signature Helena answered readers' personal questions, usually concerning cohabitation problems; the latter activity was the first of its kind in a daily sv newspaper. She summarized her experiences of this counseling in the books Quick Answers (1938) and Between Four Eyes (1946). R also wrote Sätt och vett (2nd ed. 1949 and 1956), Zigzag in Spain (1950), Spanish Atlantic Coast (1952), Gustav III's wife Sofia Magdalena (1958) and Lonely Queen. Sofia Magdalena 1783–1813 (1959). The latter two books were awarded the Gustavian Prize of the Swedish Literary Society in Finland in 1961. Another fruit of her in-depth studies in the Gustavian source material was Reflections on Gustav III (Yearbook for the Swedish State Art Collections, 19, 1972).

Granddaughter of Olof R in his first marriage is the journalist Magdalena R (b. 1940), who wrote a popular science book about the genus R.

Links

Sources

Om Pitkä-Sigvid Ribbing (Norsk)

Stamfar Ribbing (enligt Adelsvapen)

http://finnholbek.dk/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I22283&tree=2



f 1200. Bosatt i Svanböre, Skåne.

Sigvids anor leder - emligt uppgift - långt ner i tiden bl.a via

sådana namn som Magnus Barfot, Harald Hårfagre, Ingjald Illråde

ner till Ottar Wendelkråka.

Sigvid levde vid år 1290 och kallas i skrift också för Svante

Ribbing Langhe. Hans gods hette Svanböre. År 1282, på St.

Eriksdagen dubbades Sigvid Ribbing den Långe av Magnus Ladulås

till "Riddare af den Helig. Seraphins Orden". Han bodde i Skåne

och byggde enligt historien Torstorps kyrka i Mark i

Västergötland. Där begravdes han också - och hans revben hängdes

upp i kyrkans tak.

Om Sigvid Sigurdsson Ribbing (svenska)

Stamfar Ribbing (enligt Adelsvapen)

http://finnholbek.dk/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I22283&tree=2



f 1200. Bosatt i Svanböre, Skåne.

Sigvids anor leder - emligt uppgift - långt ner i tiden bl.a via

sådana namn som Magnus Barfot, Harald Hårfagre, Ingjald Illråde

ner till Ottar Wendelkråka.

Sigvid levde vid år 1290 och kallas i skrift också för Svante

Ribbing Langhe. Hans gods hette Svanböre. År 1282, på St.

Eriksdagen dubbades Sigvid Ribbing den Långe av Magnus Ladulås

till "Riddare af den Helig. Seraphins Orden". Han bodde i Skåne

och byggde enligt historien Torstorps kyrka i Mark i

Västergötland. Där begravdes han också - och hans revben hängdes

upp i kyrkans tak.

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Sigvid Sigurdsson Ribbing den Lange/ The Long's Timeline