Poul Vendelbo Løvenørn


Poul Thomsen Vendelbo de Løvenørn, born Poul Thomsen was a Danish military officer, diplomat and landowner. He served as Secretary of War and Minister of the Navy in the 1730s and was the owner of Bregentved Manor.

Early life and education

He was born at Horsens, the son of farmer Thomas Poulsen Vendelbo and wife Anne Nielsdatter. His father died in 1693 and the mother then married customs officer Stephan Jacobsen in 1694. He studied theology.

Career

He then travelled to Russia where he initially worked as a teacher and later became adjutant general at the court of Peter the Great.
King Frederick IV raised him to the peerage under the surname Løvenørn on his return to Denmark in 1711. He was promoted through the ranks as a military officer and on 16 April 1722, was created Knight of the Order of the Dannebrog. He later served as Danish envoy om Berlin. In 1726, he was appointed to district governor of Aarhus County.
Løbenørn was appointed to Secretary of War in 1730 and gehejmeråd in 1731. In 1733 he was appointed to general. He was a favorite of both King Frederick IV and King Christian VI. He was granted the Order of the Elephant in 1739.

Personal life

Løvenørn married Ingeborg Dorthea Vinding, on 21 March 1714 in Church of Our lady. She was a daughter of professor at the University of Copenhagen Poul Vinding and Margrethe S. Bøgvad. His wife bore him a son, Frederik de Løvenørn who became a military officer and district governor of Kronborg and Antvorskov.
Løvenørn purchased Bregentved Manor on very favorable conditions from the king in 1721. He died on 27 February 1740.

Cultural references

wrote the poem Om Poul Vendelbo Løvenørn about Løvenørn on the occasion of his death.
Carl Ploug wrote a six pages, romantic poem about Løvenørn's early years and first encounter with his wife. The poem, entitled A Kiss, is included on the anthology Hovedværker i den danske Literatur.