Career
Margareta von Ascheberg was the youngest child of Field Marshal Rutger von Ascheberg and Magdalena Eleonora Busseck. As was the custom of the Swedish nobility as that time, she kept her name after marriage and style herself »Grevinnan Ascheberg» (Countess Ascheberg). The couple had four children.
At the outbreak of the Great Northern War, Kjell Christopher Barnekow was called to Sweden and appointed colonel of the Scanian dragoons, which he undertook to equip himself.
However, he died very suddenly and unexpectedly of a fever 19 December 1700 before he had the time to fulfill his task. As a widow, Margareta von Ascheberg was left with the responsibility of her four minor children and the management of their estates as well as the other responsibilities of her late spouse.
This included the task of the command and equipment of his Scanian regiment. She was not freed from this responsibility, and the acting colonel Kr.
A. v. Buchwaldt was appointed to see that she fulfilled her task.
In the spring of 1702, she had performed the task of a colonel by having organized and equipped the regiment and appointed its officers ready for inspection by the royal command and ready to serve in the war. She also sat at the inspection office of the regiment when it was sent to war from Kristianstad. During the war, she took care of the continued equipment and affairs of the regiment, and exchanged letters with Charles XII of Sweden about its appointments and promotions.
She was called "Coloneless" or Madame Colonel.
She was admired for "The energy and care, with which she performed her unusual task, a circumstance, which in other cases would seem impossible for a woman". Margareta von Ascheberg was also given the responsibility of the estates of her spouse, including Vittskövle, Rosendal and Örtofta in Scania, Gammel-Kjöge on Själland, Ralsvik and Streu on Rügeneral, and she also added the estate of Ugerup in Scania to lieutenant
She herself inherited and acquired the additional estates of Eliinge, Sövdeborg and Tosterup. She was a very successful business person and land owner and recommended for her efficiency.
She founded schools, hospitals and gave anonymous donations to the poor in the parishes of her estates, and in contrast to other contemporary land owners, such as the hated Christina Piper, she managed to make herself popular among her employees.
In the parish of Vittskövle, were preferred to reside, "The Ascheberg woman" became a respected figure of folklore.