Karen Andersdatter


Karen Andersdatter was the Danish mistress of King Christian IV of Denmark-Norway and the mother of one of his three illegitimate but acknowledged children, Hans Ulrik Gyldenløve.

Early life

Andersdatter was born in Bremerholm, a village on a little island in the bay of Copenhagen. Bremerholm is present-day a riverside neighborhood of downtown Copenhagen.
Andersdatter's father was Anders Hansen Wincke, a secretary from Bremerholm in Copenhagen. Andersdatter's mother was Bodil Knudsdatter Skriver.
Andersdatter's maternal uncle was Antonius Knudson, the rådmann and borgermester of Oslo.

Personal life

Life with King of Denmark

When Andersdatter met the King of Denmark for the first time, she was said to have been already engaged to a pastor named Niels Simonsen Glostrup. But Christian IV fell in love with her. In the beginning of 1613, the King swept Andersdatter away from a wedding feast to his castle, where they danced away the night. Andersdatter became his mistress and bore him one short-lived daughter, Dorothea Elisabeth Gyldenløve and a son, Hans Ulrik Gyldenlove.
Andersdatter's former fiancé, in the meantime, married her sister, Anna, and became the Bishop of Oslo two years later and he would hold his position until his death in 1639.
But, after more than three years at the court, Andersdatter, probably because of the marriage the King had made with Kirsten Munk. However, he arranged to have Andersdatter endowed with the island of Hven and an annual pension. He was said to have also given Andersdatter a couple of mansions in Copenhagen.
In 1640, there were rumors at the court that Andersdatter was planning to marry a university student by the name of Niels Nelausen. When the king heard the news, he was not pleased. The King confiscated Hven from Andersdatter and tried to get a hold of her, “Junker Snarensvend” . The engagement had to be abandoned but that did mollify the King. He raised her annuities and even commanded, shortly before his death, they would be provided by the Royal Treasury. Although the subsequent investigation upheld his decision, she found it hard, in the following economic difficulties, to get her money, which did not come for several years. So she suffered great distress. Perhaps, as compensation, she was, for a brief time, on the Board of Directors for the Danish island of Møen (now Møn, then a Royal possession south of Copenhagen, in the Baltic Sea. In 1664 she called the island “Forvalterske” .
File:Nikolaj Copenhagen.jpg|thumbnail|St. Nicolai Kirke , now the Kunsthallen Nikolaj , in Copenhagen

Eyesight

A family tradition tells that an eye surgery in 1653 restored her sight after she had been deprived of it for 37 years, but there may be reasons to doubt the reliability of this report.

Death

In 1673, Andersdatter died in Copenhagen. Andersdatter was buried next to her daughters at the Sankt Nicolai Kirke in Copenhagen. A portrait of her is said to have hung inside this church as late as 1779 but it is apparently now lost, probably to the fire of 1795 that almost destroyed the church.
Hven was afterwards passed to her only surviving child, Hans Ulrik Gyldenløve.

Literature