Casimirsborg

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Casimirsborg, 2006. Photo by Björn Becker.

Casimirsborg is a country house just south of Gamleby, Småland, Sweden. It is situated on Gamlebyviken lake and was built in 1829 in the so-called neoclassical Tjust empire style, after the original 17th-century mansion was destroyed by fire.

During the Middle Ages, the site of the present mansion was close to a village named Mæm (as spelled in 1379). The village consisted of two farms, and is first mentioned in 1379 when an Olof of Mem is mentioned as a witness to a land sale at the district court. The following year 1380, Tyrgils Geme, freeman in Västervik, and his wife Catherine sold a small parcel of land in the village to Bo Johnsson Grip (a seneschal), who bought more land in the village in 1383 and named the entire estate Vinäs.

In the early 17th century Mem was owned by Sidonia Grip (1585–1652) who on October 6, 1616, married her cousin Count Johan Casimir Lewenhaupt (1583–1634). The latter combined all the farms in the North Country into a unified estate and received manor privileges in 1618. He built a mansion with two wings and renamed the manor for himself, Casimirsborg.

The present day estate consists of consists of 13 houses, farmland and forestry.

The mansion

References

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