Hans Brask
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Hans Brask (1464-1538), bishop in Linköping, Sweden.
Brask was born in Linköping 1464 to a bourgeois family. He studied philosophy and law at German universities and around 1500 he got a doctoral degree in civil and canon law from Rome. Upon his return to Sweden he first worked as canon and was later, in 1501, appointed cathedral dean in Linköping's cathedral. He also became a member of the council of the realm and worked for a reconciliation with Denmark, with which Sweden has been at war for some years. In 1513 he was appointed bishop. Brask was against the Sten Stures struggle with archbishop Gustav Trolle, but signed a document at the 1517 diet to remove the bishop. According to Olaus Petri's Swedish chronicles, Brask was forced to sign the document. Under his seal he should have put a note saying "In this I am forced and compelled". This legend has manifested a word in modern Swedish: Brasklapp, meaning a hidden reservation.
Brask supported the Danish king Kristian II, but was not part of the events that led to the infamous massacre in Stockholm 1520. After Gustav Vasa's rebellion he was forced to join the new king's side, but he would become an opponent of the king's politics. The events of 1527 diet in Västerås led to Brask fleeing the country to Poland.
Brask was an active man with many ideas. He had a was the first man to plan the channel between the two large Swedish lakes, Vänern and Vättern. He was running a printing house in Söderköping. The correspondence between Brask and others is an important source of history in a country where not much was written down.
Bishop Brask is believed to have died in Landa monastery in 1538.