Gerhard Johann von Löwenwolde explained

Gerhard Johann von Löwenwolde
Birth Place:Swedish Estonia
Death Date:1721
Death Place:Russian Empire
Nationality:Baltic German, Estonian, Swedish, Russian
Occupation:knight and diplomat in Swedish, Saxon and Russian service
Russian plenipotentiary in Livonia (1710-1713)
hofmeister of Princess Charlotte of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (1713-1721)

Gerhard Johann von Löwenwolde (Гергард Иоганн Левенвольде, died 1721)[1] was a Baltic German Estonian knight.[2] In the 1690s, he announced support of Johann Reinhold von Patkul's lobbyism against Swedish absolutist threats to Baltic noble privileges, while also working with the Swedish authorities in Estonia.[1] He served in the Swedish army, and in 1697 was promoted major of the Swedish garrison in Riga.[3] During the Great Northern War, he first served Augustus the Strong of Saxe-Poland–Lithuania, and after taking an ambiguous stance towards August and Peter the Great of Russia entered Peter's service after the Capitulation of Estonia and Livonia in 1710. He served as Peter the Great's plenipotentiary of Livonia during the same year, and held that office until 1713, when he became hofmeister in the service of Princess Charlotte of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, wife of Peter's son Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia.[1]

With Magdalene Elisabeth von Löwen he had the following children:[4]

Sources

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Bushkovitch (2001), p. 295
  2. Kappeler (2008), p. 68
  3. Web site: http://print.biografija.ru/?id=75329 . ru:Левенвольде Гергард Иоганн . biografija.ru . Russian . 8 February 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110825032319/http://print.biografija.ru/?id=75329 . 25 August 2011 .
  4. Estland. Genealogisches Handbuch, p. 610