Background
He was the son of Ludvik Munk (1500-1537), and is also referred to as Ludvig Ludvigsen Munk von Schleswig-Holstein and Ludvig Munk til Nørlund.
He was the son of Ludvik Munk (1500-1537), and is also referred to as Ludvig Ludvigsen Munk von Schleswig-Holstein and Ludvig Munk til Nørlund.
He was a Danish official and Count. He was a Junker at the royal court in 1561. Subsequently he served in the Navy and participated in the Northern Seven Years" War (1563-1570) both at sea and on land.
He moved to Trondheim, Norway in 1571, and served there as the Lord of Trøndelag, Jemtland and Herjedalen until 1577.
Then he relocated to Akershus Fortress in Oslo and served as the Danish-Norwegian Governor-general of Norway from 1577 to 1583. After 1583 he became the District Governor and feudal overlord of: Hedmark (1587), then Lister (1588-1589) and Trøndelag (1589–1599).
His service as a feudal overlord was noted for controversy. While he served as Lord of Trøndelag in 1573, he and his officials exceeded their rights and collected taxes or appropriated lands beyond that allowed by law.
The residents sent a committee led by Rolv Halvardsson to Copenhagen to appeal Munk"s judgments to King Frederick II of Denmark, as was their ancient right.
During King Christian"s tour of Norway in 1596, this and other abuses were reported to the king, who dismissed Munk from office, banished him to his estates in Jutland and forced him to pay a heavy fine. Lockhart indicates Ludvig Munk"s Jutland estates were forfeited to the king posthumously. Kirsten bore the king twelve children, among them the famous Countess Leonora Christina Ulfeldt, and Kirsten"s children intermarried with the nobility of Denmark.
Although Munk"s judgments were overturned, Munk ignored the king"s written direction to redress the grievances and instead imprisoned and hanged all members of the committee.