Juel, Mogens

Mogens Mogensen Juel til Knivholt (1553-1568), nævnes 1537 som ridemand og 1541 som domsmand, 1563 som proviantmester

Gift:

  • 1. gang 1536 Ingeborg Thomasdatter Galskyt

  • 2. gang: før 1568 med Inger Markvardsdatter Tidemand.

Død: 1579 ?

Aneblad

Gravsted: Flade Kirke. Korvæggen er opsat Gravsten over Mogens Juel, død 1579, og hans to Hustruer, Ingeborg Galskyt og Inger Tidemand

Lokationer

Mogens Mogensen Juel til Knivholt (1553-1568), mentioned 1537 as a knight and 1541 as a magistrate, 1563 as a provost

Married:

1st time 1536 Ingeborg Thomasdatter Galskyt

2nd time: before 1568 to Inger Markvardsdatter Tidemand.

Died: 1579 ?

Grave site: Flade Church. The choir wall has a tombstone of Mogens Juel, died 1579, and his two wives, Ingeborg Galskyt and Inger Tidemand.

Locations

The Old Hospital, Strandgade 2, Sæby

Biografi i relation til Sæby

Mogens Juel og hustruen Inger Markvardsdatter Tidemand oprettede 1565 et hospital i Sæby, havde 1570 en gård samme sted.

Tidemandsholm hed i middelalderen Kartoft, vist oprindelig et naturnavn og en sammensætning af kar = kær og toft = jorden ved en bolig ; gården ligger nemlig ved en kærstrækning mellem omgi­vende højdedrag, og den nævnes tidligst 1469, da den hørte under Børglum Kloster og sammen med tre andre større gårde, Bangsbo, Birkumgaard og Stenbjerggaard, omtales som klosterets »frie gård«, hvilket vil sige, at den var fri for al kongelig tyngsel og kun svarede afgift til klosteret.

Af dettes lensmænd eller forpagtere her kendes Las Lunov, vist til Søgaard i Thy, som kom til Kartoft 1492, og 1506 havde Thomas Jensen Galskyt til Hvidstedgaard i Tårs den i forlening, og derefter blev den 1536 af biskop Stygge Krumpen pantsat og forlenet til Mogens Juel til Udstrup ved Nissumfjord, som ved samme tid æg­tede Thomas Galskyts datter Ingeborg, og som ca. 1550 også blev ejer af Knivholt i Flade sogn, i hvis kirke han og hans to hustruer er begravet. Mogens Juel ejede allerede 1532 noget bøndergods i Vendsyssel, blandt andet to gårde i Borup i Tårs sogn, som han nævnte år ind-værgede med lovhævd sammen med et øde byggested mellem Borup og Hovstrup ; 1545 skrev han sig »til Kartoft«, så han har vel da boet her ; men først 1572 fik han af kronen, der jo 1536 var blevet ejer af klostergodset, skøde på Kartoft og en gård Bøgit (Bøjet) samt her­ligheden af et præstebol i Sæsing, hvilket gods han havde fået forle­ningsbrev på 1543. I stedet for dette gods afstod han til kronen noget jordegods på Møen.

Efter Ingeborg Galskyts død 1551 ægtede Mo­gens Juel Inger Markvardsdatter Tidemand fra Hellerup i Svendborg amt, der antagelig efter hans død ca. 1579 flyttede fra Knivholt til Kartoft og gav denne gård navnet Tidemandsholm.

I Tårs kirke fin­des et på træ malet billede af hende. I en præsteindberetning fra ca. 1730 skrives, at billedet bærer påskrift »Ingeborre Tidmands-Datter«, men ved senere restaurering af det, 1752 eller muligt i sidste halvdel af 1800'erne, er navnet blevet forvansket til Ingeborg Thomasdatter og skulle således forestille Mogens Juels første hustru.

Ingeborg Tidemand døde efter 1606, da hun solgte Tidemandsholm til Mogens Kaas, søn af Erik Kaas til Aas og Nibstrup, der havde været gift med fru Ingeborgs datter Ellen Juel.

Mogens Kaas, der var hofjunker og ejede Aas, Tidemandsholm, Nibstrup, Hørbylund m. m., og som 1625 takseredes til at være ejer af 514 tdr. htk., var dog ingen rig mand, idet han samme år pantsatte Tidemandsholm og Hørbylund og solgte flere af sine godser, så han 1638 kun ejede ca. 152 tdr. htk. Det ligger nær at antage, at det var ham, der lod borggården på Tidemandsholm omgive af vandfyldte grave, hvis det da ikke er sket under Kejserkrigen 1627 - 29, da gården var udlagt til en kejserlig rit­mester Lorentz. Medens Mogens Kaas boede først på Aas og derefter på Tidemandsholm, boede han fra 1634 på Nibstrup i Vester Brønder­slev sogn og blev her 1644 udplyndret af de svenske krigsfolk, der endog trak klæderne af ham. Han døde 1656 efter 1634 at have solgt Tidemandsholm til sin søn af andet ægteskab (med Agathe von Meh­len) Markor Kaas, der døde på Læsø 1658, hvortil han var flygtet under svenskernes besættelse af Jylland.

Biography in relation to Sæby

Mogens Juel and his wife Inger Markvardsdatter Tidemand established a hospital in Sæby in 1565, and had a farm there in 1570.

Tidemandsholm was called Kartoft in the Middle Ages, probably originally a natural name and a combination of kar = kær and toft = the land near a dwelling; The farm is situated on a ridge between surrounding hills, and it is mentioned at the earliest in 1469, when it belonged to Børglum Abbey and, together with three other larger farms, Bangsbo, Birkumgaard and Stenbjerggaard, is referred to as the abbey's "free farm", which means that it was free from all royal burdens and only paid dues to the abbey.

Of its lords or tenants here, Las Lunov, shown to Søgaard in Thy, who came to Kartoft in 1492, is known, and in 1506 Thomas Jensen Galskyt to Hvidstedgaard in Tårs had it in loan, and then in 1536 it was mortgaged and loaned by bishop Stygge Krumpen to Mogens Juel to Udstrup at Nissumfjord, who at the same time married Thomas Galskyt's daughter Ingeborg, and who ca. 1550 also became owner of Knivholt in Flade parish, in whose church he and his two wives are buried. Mogens Juel already owned some farming property in Vendsyssel in 1532, including two farms in Borup in Tårs parish, which he registered with the law in that year, together with a deserted building site between Borup and Hovstrup; in 1545 he registered "til Kartoft", so he must have lived here; but only in 1572 he got from the crown, who had become the owner of the monastery estate in 1536, a deed to Kartoft and a farm Bøgit (Bøjet) as well as the glory of a priest's estate in Sæsing, which estate he had got a deed of loan on in 1543. In place of this estate he ceded to the Crown some land on Møen.

After Ingeborg Galskyt's death in 1551 Mogens Juel married Inger Markvardsdatter Tidemand from Hellerup in Svendborg county, who presumably after his death c. 1579 moved from Knivholt to Kartoft and gave this farm the name Tidemandsholm.

In Tårs church there is a picture of her painted on wood. In a clergyman's report from about 1730 it is written that the picture bears the inscription "Ingeborre Tidmands-Datter", but when it was later restored, in 1752 or possibly in the last half of the 1800s, the name was changed to Ingeborg Thomasdatter and was thus supposed to represent Mogens Juel's first wife.

Ingeborg Tidemand died after 1606, when she sold Tidemandsholm to Mogens Kaas, son of Erik Kaas of Aas and Nibstrup, who had been married to Mrs Ingeborg's daughter Ellen Juel.

Mogens Kaas, who was court junk and owned Aas, Tidemandsholm, Nibstrup, Hørbylund etc., and who in 1625 was taxed to be the owner of 514 tdr. htk, was not a rich man, however, as in the same year he mortgaged Tidemandsholm and Hørbylund and sold several of his estates, so that in 1638 he owned only about 152 tdr. htk. It is easy to assume that it was he who had the castle at Tidemandsholm surrounded by water-filled graves, if this did not happen during the Imperial War 1627 - 29, when the farm was assigned to an imperial surveyor Lorentz. While Mogens Kaas lived first at Aas and then at Tidemandsholm, he lived from 1634 at Nibstrup in Vester Brønderslev parish and was robbed here in 1644 by Swedish soldiers, who even stripped him of his clothes. He died in 1656 after selling Tidemandsholm in 1634 to his son by his second marriage (to Agathe von Mehlen) Markor Kaas, who died on Læsø in 1658, where he had fled during the Swedish occupation of Jutland.