Natt och Dag
The Natt och Dag is a Swedish noble family and the oldest surviving family of pure Swedish extraction, with origins stretching back at least as far as the late thirteenth century. However, the actual name Natt och Dag, alluding to the contrasting colours of its coat of arms, was not coined until the sixteenth century, and was not used as a surname by the family itself until the eighteenth century It is therefore customary to write the name in parentheses when applying it to individuals prior to 1700.
History
The family's oldest known ancestor is the knight, Lawspeaker of Värend, and Councillor of the Realm Nils Sigridsson, who is first attested in a document from 11 May 1280 and lived at Ringshult, near Torpa in Östergötland.It is possible the family's origins stretch even further back. Gabriel Anrep, a Swedish genealogist, wrote in 1862:
In the fifteenth century, the family split into two branches. The junior branch, descended from Bo Stensson, adopted the surname Sture, although they continued to bear the Natt och Dag coat of arms, and thus are sometimes considered either as an offshoot of the Natt och Dag or as a separate dynasty, the Sture#Younger [Sture Family (Natt och Dag)|Younger Sture Family]. The Younger Stures enjoyed great prominence in the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Svante Nilsson and his son Sten Sture the Younger ruled Sweden as regents during the period 1503-20, and Sten's sons Nils Stensson Sture and Svante Stensson Sture, and the latter's son Nils Svantesson Sture, were all important figures in Swedish politics during the reigns of Kings Gustav I and Erik XIV. This branch became extinct with the death of Svante Mauritzson Sture in 1616.
The senior branch of the family was descended from Bo Stensson's elder brother, Bengt Stensson, who was a knight, Lawspeaker of Närke and Councillor of the Realm, and died circa 1450.
The family again split in two after Bengt Stensson's grandson Johan Månsson, with one line descending from Johan's elder son Måns Johansson and the other from his younger son Åke Johansson. Åke's great-grandson and namesake Åke Axelsson lived 1594-1655. He served as a Councillor of the Realm and also as Marshal of the [Realm (Sweden)|Marshal of the Realm], and on 20 April 1652 he was ennobled by Queen Christina. With this the Natt och Dag were formally inducted into the Swedish nobility, and their coat of arms was added to the Riddarhus; however, this line died out in 1666 with Åke's grandson Carl Axelsson.
The other line descended from Måns Johansson produced a number of military officers in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, during Sweden's Great Power Era, and in more recent times the prominent governmental official and the writer Niklas Natt och Dag. This branch of the family survives to the present day.
One branch of the family resides in the United States, particularly the states of Alaska and Washington, using the truncated surname Dagg.
Coat of arms
- Shield: Parti per fess Or and Azure.
- Helm: Six peacock feathers between two colours.
Noted members
Main Branch
- Måns Johansson, resided at Ringshult at the shores of Sommen. During the Dacke War he sided with Gustav Vasa despite having a difficult relation towards him. He was put in charge of an army to suppress the rebellion.
- Johan [Månsson (Natt och Dag)], executed in Stockholm Bloodbath.
- Måns Bengtsson (Natt och Dag), killed Engelbrekt Engelbrektsson.
- Christina Natt och Dag, foster mother of queen Christina.
- Åke Natt och Dag
- Gösta Natt Och Dag
- Niklas Natt och Dag, Swedish writer