.

Childe Lila, now, at 18, LADY Lila, Princess of Neder Gaard (a Quarter of the Mattrup Estate)

Seen Here At the Home of Her Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, at Great, Great, Great, Grandfather,

Thomas Madsen of Neder Gaard  -> Neergaard



Happy
18th (!)
Birthday
Oh Favorite
Grand
Daughter,
from
ALL TEN generations
of your
Neergaard
ancestors,
who are
PROUD
to have you
bear their name.

CLICK for the story

Love,
Gramma and (YF) Grampa




























Thomas Madsen
Born 1652  - The first bearer of the Neergaard Family Name

Lila’s and Samer’s Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Grandfather

 

In the mid 17th century, Christian V, king of Denmark, saw a chance to wrest back from the nobility the power to rule his country.  The authority of the kings had, little by little over the centuries, been whittled away from the throne.   Christian's opportunity came when new trade routes opened from the Orient, elevating Copenhagen from a town dependent on fishing to a portal into Europe from Russia, turning the city into a thriving commercial center and giving rise to a wealthy merchant class. 

 

These nouveau riche families hungered for social status, some endowing their children generously to make them desirable matches for the heirs of nobility.  The king, shrewdly seeing his chance, called these Copenhagen merchants together and offered them the opportunity to have a direct route to the titles and estates they coveted.  He explained that while he had the authority to give them all their sought-after privileges, he could not, without an army of sufficient strength to take back control of the country, exert the power needed to enforce his decisions.  For that he needed money to hire soldiers.  Would the merchants be interested in funding his army?   The answer was Yes.

 

With the backing of these allies, the king was able to work his will.   He declared the old aristocrats’ huge estates forfeit.  He graciously returned small portions to the original owners, but distributed the remainder among his new bourgeois supporters.  

 

One of the properties thus reapportioned was the "General Estate of Mattrup" on Jutland.   Mattrup was broken up into four parts, two of which were named after their topography:  the Over Gaard, or upper farm,  and the Neder Gaard, the lower farm, which stretched for several miles along the banks of the Mattrup River ("Neder" means low, as in "nether", and "gaard" means farm or estate).

Thomas Madsen, a politically active
 peasant in the area, influential for the cause of the king, was the recipient of the Neder Gaard According to custom, when a family had an estate, its title was taken as the personal name of the family members;  thus Thomas Madsen became Thomas of Neder Gaard, the name eventually eliding to Neergaard.

 

Mattrup and the original Neder Gaard is in the Gredstrup (town), Sogh (township), Trysting Herred (county), State of Skandenborg, in Jutland, the portion of Denmark attached as a peninsula to the European mainland.  (Copenhagen is on an island.)


Madsen leased out Neder Gaard and moved to the island of Seeland, where he took up a lease on another large estate, Svenistrup, in Kimmerslø Ramsøe, county, state of Kjobvenhauns (Copenhagen).  He ran Svenistrup successfully, and eventually died there at the end of the 17th century (subsequently, one of his grandsons bought the estate, which remains in the family today).   Madsen left five children, among whom were the three sons who became the founders of the three branches of the Neergaard family.

 

The line of "de Neergaard" stems from Madsen’s grandson Peter, the fifth child of Madsen's oldest son Johan.  Three of Peter's sons were ennobled in 1780, one having been Denmark’s Minister of War, another a jurist and member of the state cabinet.  They and their families are buried alongside Waldemar I, first king of Denmark, in the Neergaard chapel in St Bent's Church (oldest large church in Denmark, from the 11th century) in Ringstedt, first capital of Denmark.   This branch of the Neergaard family is still prominent in Denmark today, holding a number of large estates and chateaux on Seeland, southwest of Copenhagen.

 

Madsen/Neergaard himself is presumed to be buried in Kinnerslø Churchyard.   There is a verse about him inscribed on an old stone there that translates as:

 

            A peasant Thomas was and drove the plow

            From Jutland to Sjieland made his way

            Where he was tenant and at last a wealthy man

            His son’s son’s three children are now noblemen.