imagined them in 1876.In 1513, when Christian became king of Denmark, mother and daughter moved with the king to
Copenhagen. Her brother, Dionysius Villoms, was named apothecary of the king, her other brother having been appointed to the office of
lensmand at
Bergenhus the year prior. Her influence over the king became greater after the death of her daughter in 1517, and she was made his political adviser and confidant. In 1517, Sigbrit was appointed to succeed her former antagonist
Anne Meinstrup to the office of
Hofmesterinde to the Queen's Household, as well as put in charge of the Household of the Crown Prince
Hans as royal governess. From 1519 onward, she was accounted the most politically influential person in Denmark after the king himself. The king put her in charge of the customs office and the royal treasury, in effect making her the
de facto royal treasurer and Minister of Finance: she was however never formally called minister, but instead given the title of
Mother Sigbrit, at that time normally an honorary title for the female head of a family. Being a
bourgeoise, she was known for forwarding the interests of the merchant classes and the interests of the cities in general. In 1522, she instigated a new law about hygiene in the capital city of Copenhagen, where people were told to have their houses cleaned every week. She was unpopular with the nobility, and the target of public slander: because of her herbal knowledge, her critics spread rumors that she was a
witch, and she was blamed for being the person behind the
Stockholm Bloodbath in 1520. ==Later life and death ==