Baron
Gustaf Adolf Reuterholm (
1756-
1813),
Swedish statesman. After a brief military career he was appointed Kammarherre to Sophia Magdalena, queen consort of
Gustav III of Sweden and subsequently became intimately connected with the king’s brother,
Charles, then duke of
Sudermania. He remained in the background throughout the reign of Gustavus III, whom he constantly opposed and by whom he was imprisoned along with the other malcontents in
1789.
He was abroad at the time of the king’s death, but a summons from his friend, now duke regent, speedily recalled him, and in
1793 he was made a member of the
Privy Council and one of the “lords of the realm.” At first he seemed inclined to adopt a liberal system, and reintroduced the freedom of the press. He did this solely, however, to reverse the Gustavian system, and persecuted the stalwarts of the late king (e.g.
G. M. Armfelt, J. K. Toll) with a petty vindictiveness which excited general disgust. Towards the end of the regency, Reuterholm inclined towards an alliance with
Russia on the basis of a marriage between the young king, Gustav IV, and the empress
Catherine II’s granddaughter, Alexandra Pavlovna, an alliance frustrated by the bigotry of the intended groom. At home the Swedish government ended as ultra-reactionary, owing to an insignificant riot in
Stockholm which so alarmed Reuterholm that he threatened all printers who printed anything relating to the constitutions of the
French republic or the
United States of America with the loss of their privileges. In March
1795 he closed the
Swedish Academy because A. G. Silfverstolpe in his inaugural address had ventured to disapprove of the coup d’etat of
1789.
On the accession of
Gustav IV of Sweden on
November 1,
1796 Reuterholm was expelled from Stockholm. For the next twelve years he lived abroad under the name of Tempelcrantz. After the revolution of
1809 he returned to Sweden, but was denied all access to
Charles XIII, and quitted his country for good. He died in
Schleswig on
December 27,
1813.
See also: List of Swedish politicians