Military Office of the Land Defence
The Military Office of the Land Defence, from 1840 to 1922 called the Military Office of the Ministry of Land Defence, was an office in the Royal Chancery from 1840 to 1945, where all so-called ‘military command matters’ were handled and from where these accompanying dispatches were issued. In 1945, it was amalgamated into the Military Office of the Minister of Defence.
History
The Military Office of the Ministry of Land Defence traces its origins to the Office of Adjutant General, which in connection with the departmental reforms of 1840 ceased. The Ministry of Land Defence and the Ministry for Naval Affairs were established, where – as far as the army is concerned – so-called command matters came to be handled within the ministry's military office. The command matters were the matters of usually less importance which were decided by the king in his capacity as Supreme Commander of the Swedish Armed Forces on land. These mainly concerned the army's weapons exercises, schools, training, personnel accounting, service conditions, etc.According to the 1925 Land Defence Army Order, the personnel at the Military Office of the Land Defence consist of:
- 1 chief, regimental officer with fees from the Ministry of Defence;
- 1 vice chief, regimental officer of the General Staff;
- 3 captains from the General Staff;
- 7 retired officers with fees from the Ministry of Defence;
- 2 active company officers, ordered from the troop units;
- 2 retired non-commissioned officers as office non-commissioned officers with fees from the Ministry of Defence; and
- 1 office guard with a salary from the Ministry of Defence
- In addition, three aspirants in the General Staff were generally ordered to serve in the Military Office.
On 1 July 1945, the Military Office of the Land Defence was amalgamated into the Military Office of the Minister of Defence.
Location
The Ministry of Land Defence, like the Ministry for Naval Affairs, had its premises in the Stenbockska palatset at Birger Jarls torg 4, during the years 1840–1851. During this time, however, the Military Office was located in the so-called Preisiska huset on Drottninggatan.Chief
The Military Office was led by a General Staff officer with usually the rank of colonel.Chiefs
- ????–1846: Edvard August Peijron
- 1846–????: Pehr Christian Lovén
- ????–1853: ?
- 1853–1862: Eric af Klint
- 1862–1866: Sven Lagerberg
- 1866–1872: Carl Leijonhufvud
- 1872–1873: Hugo Raab
- 1873–1875: Axel Ryding
- 1875–1880: Otto Taube
- 1880–1886: Adam Anders Thorén
- 1886–1888: Hemming Gadd
- 1888–1891: Carl Warberg
- 1891–1892: Carl Nordensvan
- 1891–1897: Carl Axel Nordenskjöld
- 1897–1897: Hans Alexander Gustaf Altvater Pantzerhielm
- 1897–1899: Ebbe von Hofsten
- 1899–1900: Hugo Jungstedt
- 1900–1905: Magnus Blomstedt
- 1905–1909: Hugo Hult
- 1909–1912: ?
- 1912–1915: Georg Nyström
- 1915–1919: Hjalmar Säfwenberg
- 1919–1923: Oscar Nygren
- 1923–1926: Carl Sjögreen
- 1926–1929: Bo Boustedt
- 1929–1932: Erik Testrup
- 1932–1934: Torsten Friis
- 1934–1936: Ernst af Klercker
- 1936–1937: Helge Jung
- 1937–1938: Henry Tottie
- 1938–1945: Henry Kellgren
Vice chiefs
- 1858–1865: Fredrik Wrangel
- 1865–1867: ?
- 1867–1872: Daniel Nordlander
- 1872–1874: ?
- 1874–1875: Oskar Teodor Fåhræus
- 1875–1879: Carl Bror Munck af Fulkila
- 1880–1880: A.A. Thorén
- 1880–1883: Hemming Gadd
- 1884–1885: Anton Gustaf Jonas af Jochnick
- 1885–1886: Jesper Crusebjörn
- 1886–1888: Carl Warberg
- 1888–1891: Hans Adolf von Koch
- 1892–1893: Knut Gillis Bildt
- 1893–1895: Bengt Erland Eberhard von Hofsten
- 1895–1899: Hugo Jungstedt
- 1899–1901: ?
- 1901–1903: Hugo Hult
- 1903–1904: Emil Mörcke
- 1904–1906: ?
- 1906–1910: Carl Gustaf Hammarskjöld
- 1910–1915: ?
- 1915–1918: Oscar Nygren
- 1918–1920: Knut Albert Fredrik Lindencrona
- 1920–1928: ?
- 1928–1930: Hjalmar Falk
- 1930–1935: ?
- 1935–1937: Henry Tottie
- 1937–1944: ?
- 1944–1945: Per Kellin