Jacob Tersmeden
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2020) |
Wohlgeboren Jacob Tersmeden | |
---|---|
Born | 20 May 1712 |
Died | 9 February 1767 Hedemora, Dalarna, Sweden | (aged 54)
Burial place | Tersmedenska gravkortet, Söderbärke Church, Dalarna, Sweden |
Nationality | Swedish |
Alma mater | Uppsala University |
Occupation | Ironmaster, member of parliament |
Political party | Hats |
Spouse(s) | Lona Lisa Söderhielm
(m. 1743) |
Children |
|
Parents |
|
Family | Tersmeden |
Wohlgebogen Jacob Tersmeden (May 20, 1712 – February 9, 1767) was a Swedish nobleman, ironmaster,[1] assessor[2] and member of parliament representing the House of Nobility, and brother of renowned diarist Carl Tersmeden.[3]
Life[]
Early years[]
Jacob Tersmeden was born on 20 May 1712 in Larsbo, Söderbärke, Dalarna, the son of Jacob Tersmeden and Elisabeth Gangia.[4][5] He was brought up on his father's estate close to Söderbärke.[6]
Education[]
Tersmeden started to study at Uppsala University, aged eight, in 1720.[4] He was enrolled as a student at the Swedish Board of Mines, aged sixteen, to study mineralogy. Instead of continuing studying sciences, he started to shoulder administrative tasks at Larsbo bruk.[7]
Career[]
Tersmeden served as ironmaster to Ramnäs. After he had suddenly passed in 1767, his wife Magdalena Elisabeth Söderhielm, shouldered the role as ironmaster.[8]
Politics[]
Tersmeden was member of parliament in 1755–1756, he did so as the head of the Tersmeden's, serving the interests of his noble family in the assembly of the feudal estates of Sweden. In 1760–1762, his younger brother, Carl, shouldered the role as representant of the Tersmeden's at the riksdag.
Personal life[]
Marriage[]
On September 22, 1743, Tersmeden married Magdalena Elisabeth Söderhielm, also known as Lona Lisa, at World Heritage Site Engelsberg Ironworks.
Tersmeden's and Söderhielm's first child, Maria Elisabeth, was born in 1744.
Tersmeden is a direct ancestor of the Hereditary Princess of Liechtenstein, Princess Augusta of Eulenburg and Hertefeld and resistance fighter Libertas Schulze-Boysen.
Death[]
Tersmeden died on February 9, 1767, aged 54, in Hedemora. He was buried on March 3, in the Tersmeden grave choir at Söderbärke Church.[4]
References[]
- ^ Jansson, Edvard Alfred (1951). En bok om Ramnäs bruk (in Swedish). Ramnäs bruks aktiebolag.
- ^ Personhistorisk tidskrift (in Swedish). Personhistoriska Samfundet. 1954.
- ^ Kjellberg, Sven T.; Svensson, S. Artur (1969). Slott och herresäten i Sverige: Södermanland 2. Löfsta-Öster Malma (in Swedish). Allhem.
- ^ a b c "Tersmeden nr 1940 - Adelsvapen-Wiki". www.adelsvapen.com. Retrieved 2021-08-30.
- ^ Gabriel), Gabriel Anrep (i e Johan (1858). Svenska adelns ättar-taflor utgifna: Abrahamsson-Graufelt (in Swedish). P. A. Norstedt & Son̈er.
- ^ Tersmedens genealogier (in Swedish). Retrieved 3 July 2020.
- ^ "Tersmeden - adliga bruksägare | Svensson" (in Swedish). 2010-08-14. Retrieved 2021-04-20.
- ^ "Schenströmska Herrgårdens historia – från 1700-talet till idag". Schenströmska Herrgården (in Swedish). Retrieved 2021-08-30.
External links[]
- 1712 births
- 1767 deaths
- Members of the Riksdag
- Swedish ironmasters
- Swedish people of German descent
- Uppsala University alumni
- Swedish mineralogists
- 18th-century Swedish politicians
- 18th-century Swedish businesspeople
- Swedish nobility
- People from Dalarna
- Tersmeden family