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Sunday, 17 August 2014
Indexes again

The present status in regard to the indexes to the volumes in the archive of the Livonian Governor General: 

The Tartu volumes 

EAA.278.1.XIX-68 (Letters from Governors and garrison commanders at Narva 1691-1699)
EAA.278.1.XIX-74 (Letters to Paul von Strokirch 1699-1702)
EAA.278.1.XX-18 (Letters concerning the war in Livonia 1700-1709)
EAA.278.1.XX-19 (Letters from Livonian clergymen 1700-1707)
EAA.278.1.XX-21b (Miscellaneous letters to Erik Dahlbergh 1700-1702)
EAA.278.1.XX-31 (Miscellaneous letters about the war in Courland 1701-1708)

The Riga volumes

LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 272 (Letters from various officers 1700-1703)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 275 (Letters from naval officers & others 1700-1709
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 290 (Letters from the border 1699-1703)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 291 (Letters concerning the war in Livonia 1700-1703)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1. vol. 292 (Letters concerning the war in Livonia 1703-1708)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 293 (Miscellaneous letters 1695-1700)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 294 (Letters to Erik Dahlbergh 1700-1702)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 295 (Letters from Swedish diplomats and officers in Danzig and Elbing 1699-1708)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 296 (Miscellaneous letters from Swedish and foreign officials and diplomats 1694-1709)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 297 (Miscellaneous letters to Charles XII and to Mårten Trotzig 1700)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 298 (Letters from Gustaf Ernst Albedyhl 1700-1702)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 299 (Letters from Gustaf Ernst Albedyhl 1703-1704)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 300 (Letters from Gustaf Ernst Albedyhl 1707-1708)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1. vol. 301 (Letters from H. G. and H. J. von Buddenbrock 1701-1703)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 302 (Letters from Erik Dahlbergh 1696-1699)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 303 (Letters from Erik Dahlbergh 1700-1702)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 304 (Letters from Finland 1700-1709)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 305 (Miscellaneous letters 1701-1708)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 306 (Miscellaneous letters 1700-1708)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 309 (Letters from Libau 1701-1709)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 310 (Letters from F. W. and J. F. von Liphardt 1700-1705)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 311 (Letters from Abraham Cronhjort and Georg Lybecker 1701-1708)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 315 (Letters from Bauske, Mitau and Selburg 1701-1703)

This should be around 3,300 letters and documents.  


Posted by bengt_nilsson at 8:23 PM MEST
Updated: Monday, 1 September 2014 7:04 PM MEST
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Sunday, 10 August 2014
Wolmar Anton von Schlippenbach
Topic: Generals

The commander of the Swedish forces in Livonia has been much vilified by posterity and the opinion seems to have been shared by many contemporaries. On 3 December 1704 Samuel Bark wrote to his friend Olof Hermelin: "Why in God's name has Schlippenbach been placed in Reval... he is hated and mistrusted by everybody."

An intriguing piece of information concerning Schlippenbach's career can be found among his papers in Riksarkivet, Stockholm. In a letter dated  Libau 7 October 1701 Major General Carl Magnus Stuart, one of Charles XII's closest military advisors, writes that he is very pleased with Schlippenbach's success. Schlippenbach should, Stuart writes, remember who persuaded him to remain in the army. His Majesty, Stuart continues, well understands that I am not advocating you because of my personal interest but because of your merits.

Stuart also writes (which is perhaps even more interesting) that he understands Schlippenbach's unhappiness with how things have developed. No one has more than I wished that the major part of the army had marched to that border, but other things have put a stop to this and I am not at all happy about it, Stuart writes. This of course strongly suggests that Stuart was no supporter of the decision to intervene in the Lithuanian civil war, but would have preferred a campaign against Russia. The "other things" were, if I may hazard a guess, the contacts with the Sapieha family and their appeal for assistance.

 

Sources: 

Riksarkivet, M 1402

Bark, Samuel, Bref från Samuel Bark till Olof Hermelin 1702-1708. I. - Stockholm, 1914 


Posted by bengt_nilsson at 10:13 PM MEST
Updated: Sunday, 10 August 2014 10:14 PM MEST
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Sunday, 3 August 2014
Indexes thus far
Topic: Archives

The archive of the Livonian Governor General 


At present I have covered the following Tartu volumes:

EAA.278.1.XIX-68 (Letters from Governors and garrison commanders at Narva 1691-1699)
EAA.278.1.XIX-74 (Letters to Paul von Strokirch 1699-1702)
EAA.278.1.XX-18 (Letters concerning the war in Livonia 1700-1709)
EAA.278.1.XX-19 (Letters from Livonian clergymen 1700-1707)
EAA.278.1.XX-21b (Miscellaneous letters to Erik Dahlbergh 1700-1702)
EAA.278.1.XX-31 (Miscellaneous letters about the war in Courland 1701-1708)

Of the Riga volumes:

LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 272 (Letters from various officers 1700-1703)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 275 (Letters from naval officers & others 1700-1709
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 290 (Letters from the border 1699-1703)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 291 (Letters concerning the war in Livonia 1700-1703)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1. vol. 292 (Letters concerning the war in Livonia 1703-1708)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 293 (Miscellaneous letters 1695-1700)
LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 294 (Letters to Erik Dahlbergh 1700-1702)

All in all about 1,870 letters and other documents.  These volumes are, as I am sure I have mentioned earlier, not always what they appear to be from the old descriptions but they are all of the "miscellaneous kind". Letters from more prominent correspondents such as for example Henning Rudolf Horn in Narva, Carl Gustaf Skytte in Dorpat and Major General Schlippenbach are usually found in specific volumes. Letters from less well-known figures may turn up anywhere, despite the efforts by Bienemann & others to bring some sort of order to the collection. 

 

 

 

 

 


Posted by bengt_nilsson at 9:15 PM MEST
Updated: Sunday, 3 August 2014 9:55 PM MEST
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Sunday, 27 July 2014
More indexes (again)
Topic: Archives
I have now finished LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 292 and ended up at roughly 200 documents. Next in line is vol. 293, which basically contains a lot of loose material from 1700 (a a few older ones). Most of them are of Livonian origin, but there are a few others. One is from the Duke of Holstein and dated Stockholm 12 March 1700. Duke Frederick informs Dahlbergh that the King has decided to send a few good officers to Riga, among them Col. Axel von Wangersheim. A month later Wangersheim writes from Pernau, informing Dahlbergh of his intention to try and get through to Riga despite the presence of Saxon patrols. This voulme also contains a few letters from Henrik Haij, the garrison commander at Kokenhusen.

Posted by bengt_nilsson at 10:51 PM MEST
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Sunday, 20 July 2014
Even more indexes
Topic: Archives

I am now working on the big LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 292. It seems to contain about 200 letters and documents, mostly of Livonian origin. Exceptions are a couple of Russian letters (one translated into German), a letter from Admiral Ankarstierna dated 1 June 1705 and a couple of letters from County Governor Stromberg in Gävle. The volume also contains the minutes of various interrogations held with Russian prisoners and a short account by an officer who served in Narva during the siege of 1704. 

Contrary to what I suggested in my previous entry it would appear that vol. 291, 292 and EAA.278.1.XX-18 do not cover the old Bienemann volume XX-18 and its 822 items. It would seem possible that they may contain as much as 500 items, but certainly not 822. So where is the rest? I have an idea, but I'll have to return to that particular subject in another entry.


Posted by bengt_nilsson at 11:31 PM MEST
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Sunday, 13 July 2014
More indexes
Topic: Archives

The work on a comprehensive index (or database) of the incoming letters to the Livonian Governor General during the GNW continues. After finishing LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1 vol. 275 (in the Bienemann catalogue XX-6) I have moved on to volumes 291 and 292. They present a new set of problems. In Bienemann's catalogue there is under no XX-18 "Schreiben verschiedener Offiziere und anderer Personen betr. den Krieg in Livland. 4 vol. 822 St." (Letters concerning the war in Livonia from various officers and other persons. 4 volumes. 822 items). So what has happened to these four volumes? Well, vol. 291 is still labeled XX-18:1. Vol. 292 seems to have lost the original box, but chronologically is takes over where vol. 291 ends. So is it 18:2? Well, things would appear to be more complicated than that as apart from these two Riga volumes there is also one in Tartu - EAA.278.1.XX-18. It looks like the original box is lost here as well and oddly enough this "third volume" covers the entire period 1700-1709. The fourth volume does not seem to exist anymore, but it seems entirely possible that this is a result of changes in how the three remaining are organized and not necessarily a result of losses.

As for the content in volume 291: It covers the period late December 1700 to December 1702. It's heavy on reports from Marienburg (Alūksne), probably about 45 letters out of 165. To some of them are attached spy reports from someone occasionally called "the famous Jurrenski", who seems to have gone to Polish Livonia quite often in order to pick up information from Russia. The volume also contain a few items of relevance to the Swedish attempts on Russian border posts during the winter of 1700-1701, such as letters from Jacob Spens who commanded the expedition to Pechory. Some other famous names are also represented - Carl Gustaf Rehnskiöld, Johan August Meyerfeldt and the clergyman Adrain Vergin. The volumes in addition contains copies of a few letters from Major General Horn in Narva, written to the secretary Johan Haal in Dorpat. 


Posted by bengt_nilsson at 10:06 PM MEST
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Sunday, 6 July 2014
The Daniel Cameen papers
Topic: Archives

In the Bienemann catalogue of the archive of the Livonian Governor General there is a curious item: "XIX:1 1644-1686 Papiere des Stockholmschen Bürgermeisters Daniel Caméen. 1 vol. 141 Stücke".

This volume still exists, but now only consists of 99 leaves. How can 141 items have turned into just 99 leaves? The answer is quite astonishing. During the Soviet era quite a few volumes were "restored", in this particular case apparently by adding items with absolutely no connection to Cameen. According to the modern finding aid the first 28 leaves may possibly have something to do with Cameen and the last three clearly has it, but everything in-between is dated 1637-38 and apparently just common letters to the Governor General. So what has happened to the "141 items"? Well, a good guess seems to be that they were taken by Ernst Malmberg in 1909-1910, because in his collection in Uppsala University Library there are two fairly thick bundles of Caméen papers. 

This habit of "restoring" volumes by adding loose material with no obvious connection to the existing items seems to have been quite popular. I don't know if the idea was to make them look right from the outside (correct size) in the hope that no one who could actually read the content would turn up, but it seems possible. Otherwise the Soviet era archivist could just have created entirely new volumes and called them "miscellaneous".  

In regard to my indexes (see previous post) I have finished LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol 272 (the old Bienemann XX-3) and moved on to vol. 275 (the old XX-6). This is also a curious case. According to Bienemann's catalogue it contains letters from the Swedish naval officers Henck, Fontin, Boy, Lindskiöld, Palmgreen, Preen, Rahl, Siöstierna "and others". Some of these names have been seriously distorted. "Fontin" is "Pontin" and "Rahl" is "Raab". Others weren't naval officers (Boy, Lindskiöld), so the reasoning behind the creation of this volume seems to have been that everybody who writes a letter while on a ship must be a naval officer. Some mistakes are understandable given the few tools at their disposal, but Bienemann & co should have reacted when they saw the name "Lindskiöld" as the first bearer of the name was a prominent advisor to Charles XI.


Posted by bengt_nilsson at 10:19 PM MEST
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Sunday, 29 June 2014
More about indexes
Topic: Archives

Since my previous post about a project to make an index (or database) of the letters in the archive of the Livonian Governor General I have finished EAA 278.1.XX-31 (The war in Courland 1701-1708) and started on LVVA, fond 7349, op. 1, vol. 272 (the old XX-3) . According to the modern heading it's supposed to contain letters from the officers of the regiment "Livländska Adelsfanan", but this is a distortion of Bienemann's "Schreiben des Ob. der livländischen Adelsfahne O. Brakel, des Oberstl. H. J. von Brandt, des Ob. Joachim v. Cronmann, Christer Horn's, des Oberstl. Hans Hinrich von Liewen, des Ob. Andr. v. Zöge.". Of these officers only Brakel belonged to "Livländska Adelsfanan. Brandt commanded dragoons and Cronman a Finnish infantry regiment, while Horn belonged to Governor General Dahlbergh's regiment. Liewen and Zöge commanded battalions of infantry and the latter was also deputy garrison commander at Dorpat.

XX-31 is perhaps most interesting for the letters from 1708 (about 100 of 260) and the light they shed on the situation in Lewenhaupt's corps in the weeks leading up to the arrival of the King's order to gather supplies for three months. This was a period which Hugo Uddgren didn't really analyze in the second volume of his Lewenhaupt biography (he used just about 10 pages for describing the events during the first six months, while he spent 50 on the last days of June 1709) and I don't think any Swedish historian has even looked at the volume since. 

As is often the case XX-31 contains a rather haphazard collection of letters and documents. Notable correspondents include Lt. Col. Mathias Gustaf Staël von Holstein (1666-1720), stationed at Bauska (about 35 letters) and Lt. Col. Ernst Carl von Glasenapp (about 30). 


Posted by bengt_nilsson at 10:11 PM MEST
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Sunday, 22 June 2014
Dahlbergh and Frölich
Topic: Livonia

On 7 April 1702 Charles XII finally granted Erik Dahlberg's request for retirement and appointed the Governor of Riga Carl Gustaf Frölich as his successor. However, the new Governor General of Livonia was not given the same powers as his predecessor. Frölich was told that he would rule over Riga and Neumünde, while the rest of Livonia was to be divided between the two "Economy Governors" Michael von Strokirch and Gustaf Adolf Strömfelt. When the historian Sven Grauers in 1966 wrote a biographical essay about Frölich he suggested this was caused by a lack of confidence in Frölich, but why then appoint him in the first place? Why not follow the pattern when Governor General Hastfehr died in 1695, i.e. let the Governor of Riga remain at his post and find a new Governor General?

It seems to me that the more likely explanation is the one given to Strokirch and Strömfelt - that the war made it desirable to speed up the decision making and remove the delay caused by Strömfelt and Strokirch having to put matters before Frölich. Especially Strömfelt, who mostly stayed in Dorpat and was heavily involved with both Schlippenbach's army and the Peipus naval squadron, should have felt relieved by the new arrangement. Colonel Skytte in Dorpat was perhaps less enthusiastic as Strömfelt was one of the many people he did not see eye to eye with.


Posted by bengt_nilsson at 9:44 PM MEST
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Monday, 16 June 2014
Johann Ernst Glück (1654-1705)
Topic: Archives
The clergyman Johann Ernst Glück is known for many things, for example his translation of the Bible into Latvian and his close connection to the later Catherine I. In 1894 Friedrich Bienemann jr published a number of letters from Bienemann to Governor General Dahlbergh during the period 1700-1701, letters which modern researchers have failed to find. I believe there could be a very simple explanation for this - they have looked in the wrong place... However, there exists a few more letters which Bienemann in 1894 had not yet found. They are in EAA.278.1.XX-19 and from early 1702. The first is dated 2 January and contains an account of the Russian devastation of Marienburg (Aluksne) parish: It happened on the second day of Christmas, Glück writes, ... in the afternoon when the peasants were at church. It was so unexpected that their arrival was not diiscovered until they started to burn a quarter of mile from the castle. Glück reports that only a part of the parish was torched, but unfortunately it was an area where many of those who had lost their homes in the summer and autumn of 1701 now lived. Many of the inhabitants had been captured and others killed. The reason for this disaster was the lack of cavalry, Glück writes. The event had resulted in such fear among the peasants that no one wanted to live there anymore. 

Posted by bengt_nilsson at 12:06 AM MEST
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