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Swedish Army officer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Major General Sigmund Ahnfelt (28 November 1915 – 14 November 1993) was a Swedish Army officer. Ahnfelt was commissioned as an officer in 1938 and served in the Finnish Army during World War II. He attended the United States Army Command and General Staff College from 1949 to 1950 and followed the operations of the UN troops in Korea during the Korean War in 1951. He eventually became commander of Älvsborg Regiment in Borås in the 1960s and then served as chief of staff and Deputy Commanding General of the Southern Military District. Ahnfelt served as Commanding General of the Bergslagen Military District until his retirement in 1979.
Sigmund Ahnfelt | |
---|---|
Born | Sollentuna, Sweden | 7 January 1912
Died | 14 November 1993 77) Stockholm, Sweden | (aged
Buried | |
Allegiance | Sweden |
Service | Swedish Army |
Years of service | 1938–1979 |
Rank | Major general |
Commands | Älvsborg Regiment CofS, Southern Military District Bergslagen Military District |
Battles / wars | Continuation War Korean War |
Ahnfelt was born on 28 November 1915 in Sollentuna Parish , Sweden, the son of Edmund Ahnfelt, a factory manager, and his wife Signe (née Haase).[1] Ahnfelt was the grandson of Arvid Ahnfelt and nephew of Astrid Ahnfelt.
After Ahnfelt passed studentexamen at Norra Latin in Stockholm in 1933, he completed university studies in history and political science before he began his military service in the Gotland Infantry Corps in Visby in 1934.[2]
Ahnfelt was commissioned as an officer in 1938 and was assigned as a second lieutenant to the Jämtland Ranger Regiment in Östersund.[3] He was appointed captain and company commander of the Finnish-Swedish regiment IR 13 in the Finnish Army in 1942 during the Continuation War in Finland.[1][4] Ahnfelt was an adviser in the 1948 Conscription Committee[2] and from 1949 to 1950, he studied at the United States Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, United States, and then became the first Swedish national after World War II to have studied at a military college abroad.[5]
Ahnfelt followed the operations of the UN troops in Korea during the Korean War in 1951[3] and served as a teacher in the Royal Swedish Army Staff College from 1952 to 1956 and attended the Swedish National Defence College in 1956.[1] In 1956, the Chief of the Army, Lieutenant General Carl August Ehrensvärd appointed the then major Ahnfelt as commander of the Swedish UN battalion in the United Nations Emergency Force (UNEF). The Swedish government opposed the nomination because of Ahnfeldt's previous involvement in the Lindholm movement. Ahnfeldt had been Sven Olov Lindholm's closest man for six years and had at the age of 27 candidated for the National League of Sweden after Alf Meyerhöffer at the municipal elections in Östersund. Ehrensvärd threatened to resign unless he got his way, according to prime minister Tage Erlander. Ahnfeldt was persuaded, however, by defence minister Torsten Nilsson to resign from the post.[6] He was replaced by Lieutenant Colonel Ingmar Stevenberg.[7]
Ahnfelt then served as head of the Defence Staff's Army Department from 1957 to 1960, and became lieutenant colonel in the General Staff Corps in 1959. He was an adviser in the 1960 Defence Committee, head of Section I in the Defense Staff from 1960 to 1961, and served in Älvsborg Regiment in Borås in 1961.[1] Ahnfelt was promoted to colonel in 1962 and was an adviser in the Supreme Commander of the Swedish Armed Forces's working group before the Defence Act of 1963 .[2] He then served as deputy commander of Älvsborg Regiment in 1962 and became its commander the year after. Ahnfelt was promoted to major general in 1966 and served as chief of staff and Deputy Commanding General of the Southern Military District in Kristianstad from 1966 to 1973. In 1973, he was appointed Commanding General of the Bergslagen Military District in Karlstad. He served in this position until 1979 when he retired from active service.[3]
Ahnfelt was chairman of Älvsborg Voluntary Military Training Association (Älvsborgs befäls(utbildnings)förbund) and in the Älvsborg Rifle Association (Älvsborgs skytteförbund) from 1962.[1] He authored (together with others) Både-Och (1957), Befälsföring, disciplin och förbandsanda (1957), and Officer 1938 (1983). He was a military contributor in Dagens Nyheter 1952–1954, Ny militär tidskrift ("New Military Journal") 1953–1961, Borås Tidning 1962–1966, SDS from 1968, and in Krigsvetenskapsakademiens Handlingar och Tidskrift from 1949. Ahnfelt also authored numerous articles in various military journals.[3]
In 1958, Ahnfelt married Caroline Kempff (1929–2000), the daughter of lieutenant colonel Ragnar Kempff and Maria von Hedenberg.[1]
Ahnfelt died on 14 November 1993 in Engelbrekt Parish, Stockholm.[8] He was interred in the family grave at Solna Cemetery in Solna Municipality, near Stockholm.[9]
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