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Christen Brun-Lundegaard

Christen Brun-Lundegaard was a Danish colonial official and governor of Tranquebar from 20 October 1716 to 21 January 1720.

Early career
Christen Brun-Lundegaard began his career in the Danish East India Company as an assistant in the Danish colony of Tranquebar. In 1703, he undertook a voyage to Malacca as a ship’s assistant aboard the vessel, Printz Christian. By order of the company management, he was appointed secretary to the colony's Privy Council () on 1 July 1704. In the same year, he was accused of irregularities during the previous voyage to Malacca, but was acquitted by the court. On 20 July 1707, Brun-Lundegaard was sent with the yachts Gyldenløve and Fortuna to the Danish factory, Dannemarksnagore, in Bengal, as an accountant () for the current officials and as a commissioner. He arrived at the factory in August 1707, bringing money and resources to the colony and began his work, negotiating with the factory's and earlier governor, Johan Joachim Michelsen's, creditors and confiscating the latter's belongings. As such, Michelsen's creditors were mostly repaid, while Brun-Lundegaard developed the colony's trade so that when he departed again in February 1708, he had left behind money sufficient for one year to the governor, Jacob Panck. Simultaneously, he brought saltpeter, silk, and textiles with him back to Tranquebar, which he returned to on 14 March 1708. Upon returning, he was installed as lower merchant () and became both treasurer and subaccountant () on 8 October and 27 October 1708, respectively. Brun-Lundegaard is described as having been a diligent, capable, and trusted man. Consequently, as the colony needed his capabilities as subaccountant, his multiple requests for permission to repatriate were rejected. When his request for an increased salary was also rejected, he applied on 9 October 1710 in a more determined manner for permission to return home, but was persuaded to stay as he was promised career advancement. Subsequently, he became chief accountant ('''') and third-in-command of the Privy Council on 12 May 1711, and as he had served the Company for 15 years, he received an increase in his salary. Furthermore, he advanced to (second-in-command) of the Privy Council at the end of 1714, likely due to the governor of Tranquebar, Johan Sigismund Hassius's, favor. == Governor of Tranquebar ==
Governor of Tranquebar
After Johan Sigismund Hassius's dismissal as governor, he installed Brun-Lundegaard as Interim Governor of Tranquebar on 20 October 1716 with large ceremonies. In a letter dated 19 October, Brun-Lundegaard thanked the for the appointment but described himself as a weak and meek man and instead applied for a replacement. Again in 1718, he applied for a replacement, but had to wait another two years. Meanwhile, there was a severe shortage of money in the colony, and it had to borrow 6,000 pagodas from the English at Madras and another 5,000 Danish rigsdaler from a local magnate. In 1720, a Danish ship, the Jomfru Susanne, finally reached Tranquebar, along with the hofjunker (a young nobleman who serves in the court) and new opperhoved, Ulrik Christian Nissen. Subsequently, Brun-Lundegaard resigned on 2 January 1720 and instead became the vice governor and chief merchant (). Reestablishment of Dannemarksnagore In 1716, Tranquebar was visited by a Bengali envoy, named Chandusi, who offered to return Dannemarksnagore, which had been conquered by the Mughals in 1714, in return for the Bengali vessel, Fatteromany, which had previously been captured by the Danes. After long negotiations, the former lodge was ceded back to the D.E.I.C. in 1718, and in September the same year, a new governor, Gallus Bøgvad, was sent to the lodge to try to recreate the former conditions, but to no avail. Relationship with missionaries In contrast to Governor Hassius, Brun-Lundegaard has been considered by later literature to have been friendly to the Lutheran Danish-Halle Mission. Evidently, Brun-Lundegaard laid the foundation stone of the New Jerusalem Church in Tranquebar on 9 February 1717 and assisted in gathering resources and a suitable location for the building. In return, the missionaries arranged a sort of throne as a special place for the governor inside the church. Additionally, Brun-Lundegaard saluted from Fort Dansborg at the consecration of the building and donated a plaque to be built into the wall of the church with the inscription: donated by Christen Brun-Lundegaard to the New Jerusalem Church in 1717 However, according to Danish priest and historian Anders Nørgaard, there were no major differences between Governor Hassius and Brun-Lundegaard, and Brun-Lundegaard is even said to have been against the Mission. Moreover, there is no personal friendship between Brun-Lundegaard and the missionaries, although they met when it was necessary, and showed each other goodwill. Instead, the change in relations between the local administration and the mission was caused by a new compromise reached in Denmark between the mission's inspectorate and the D.E.I.C. management. According to the new compromise, the colonial administration was to function as the mission's authority, rather than being a private cause of King Frederick IV. Meanwhile, the administration was thereby also obliged to subsidize the mission under its authority. Subsequently, the years following the compromise were a heyday for the mission, and there are no reports of problems between the mission and Governor Brun-Lundegaard. == Personal and later life ==
Personal and later life
Brun-Lundegaard was married twice: first to Wibeke Christensdatter Berg on 5 July 1714, and second to Utilia Elisabeth on 29 November 1723, after Wibeke Christensdatter's death in the same year. Utilia Elisabeth was the widow of the former leader of the Danish-Halle Mission, . Brun-Lundegaard died on 24 January 1724 in Tranquebar after a long illness, leaving no children. == See also ==
Notes and references
Notes References Works cited • • • • • • • • • • • • •
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