Carl Gyllenborg | |
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Personal details | |
Born |
, Sweden |
7 March 1679
Died | 9 December 1746 Uppsala, Sweden |
(aged 67)
Count Carl Gyllenborg (7 March 1679 in – 9 December 1746 in Uppsala) was a Swedish statesman and author.
He was born the son of Count Jacob Gyllenborg in Stockholm.
After serving in the Polish War, he was sent to London as secretary of legation. There, he married the Jacobite Sara Wright. In 1715, he was made minister plenipotentiary, and two years later was imprisoned for five months because of his participation in the plot to reinstate the House of Stuart. In 1723, he was appointed Councilor of State, and in 1738 Chancery President (Swedish: Kanslipresident), that is both Prime Minister and Foreign Minister.
Whilst in this office, he founded the Hattparti or Hattar (‘Hat’ Party), which instigated the disastrous Russo-Swedish War (1741–1743), resulting in the loss of Kymmenegård. He was successively chancellor of the universities of Lund (1728) and Uppsala (1739), was a patron of letters and art, and wrote several poems and the first Swedish comedy, Den svenska Sprätthöken (1740). His Letters . . . Relating to a Design to Raise a Rebellion on His Majesty's Dominions, to be Supported by a Force from Sweden, were published in French and English (1717).
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1711.