Ludvig Rosenkrantz

Ludvig Rosenkrantz (18 April 1628 – 23 August 1685) was a Danish-born noble, military officer, civil servant and land owner who settled in Norway. He was a member of the noble Rosenkrantz family and the first Baron of Norway.

Biography
Ludvig Holgerssøn Rosenkrantz was born in Odense, Denmark. He was a member of one of the old families of nobility in Denmark. His parents were colonel Holger Frederiksen Rosenkrantz (1599–1634) and  Justine Maximiliansdatter van der Lauwick. As the son of nobility, Rosenkrantz received royal funding to travel abroad and educate himself to become an officer in the Norwegian army.

He became a captain in 1654 and in 1658 he was appointed by King Frederick III of Denmark to be war commander of Nordafjells. He was appointed county manager in Stavanger, and served as General War Commissioner (Generalkrigskommisær) of Norway from 1673. He was also appointed a judge in Norway's highest court (Overhoffretten). He was decorated with the Order of Dannebrog in 1684.

In 1657- 1658, he married Karen Mowat (1630-1675), the daughter of Axel Mowat (1592– 1661). His father-in-law was one of the largest landowner in western Norway. They were the parents of four sons and five daughters. After the death of his first wife, he married Clara Catharina von Stockhausen (d. 1689), who had previously served as the  chambermaid of Queen Charlotte Amalie, wife of King Christian V of Denmark.

Through his marriage with Karen Mowat, who following the deaths of her brothers was the sole heiress of her father's fortune, Rosenkrantz achieved an estate which eventually formed the basis for Barony Rosendal at Kvinnherad in Hordaland. In 1678, King Christian V gave the estate the status of Barony of Rosendal (Baroniet Rosendal) at which time, Rosenkrantz became the first baron in Norway.

Related reading

 * Jorn Oyrehagen Sunde (2009)	 From a Shetland Lairdship to a Norwegian Barony: The Mouat Family and the Barony of Rosendal  (Shetland Heritage Publications) 	ISBN 978-0955764233