Jørgen Wichfeld |
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Born | (1729-07-01)1 July 1729
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Died | 19 December 1797(1797-12-19) (aged 68)
Engestofte, Denmark |
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Occupation(s) | Landowner and industrialist |
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Jørgen Wichfeld (born Jørgen Wichmand, 1 July 1729 – 19 December 1797) was a Danish landowner, industrialist and deputy district judge from Lolland-Falster who was ennobled by letters patent on 23 July 1777. He owned Engestofte on Lolland, Ulriksdal, and from 1774 to 1787 also Nordfeld on Møn.
Biography
Jørgen Wichmand was born at Engestofte in the island of Lolland as the oldest of two sons of Bertel Wichmand (1677–1732) and Bodil Cathrine Wichmand née From (died 1760). His father was a wealthy merchant from Nykøbing Falster who had acquired the estate on which his son was born in 1727.[1]
Wichmand took over Engestofte after his mother's death in 1760. He expanded his holdings by acquiring Ulriksdal in 1766 and also bought Nordfeld on Møn at auction in 1774 but sold it again in 1787. He obtained a royal license to open a starch and cosmetic powder factory at Engestofte in 1770.
Wichmand and his brother Thomas Frederik Wichmand were ennobled by letters patent with the name Wichfeld on 23 July 1777.
He was a deputy district judge at Lolland-Falsters landsting in 1769–1787 and was appointed to etatsråd in 1779.
Legacy
Wichfeld never married and had no children. On 8 November 1799, he left his two estates to his nephew Henning Wichfeld with an obligation to turn them into a stamhus (family foundation).
References