Von Sydow murders

Ebba Hamn, one of the victims, at the scene
Hjalmar von Sydow, one of the murder victims

The von Sydow murders happened on 7 March 1932 in Stockholm and is one of Sweden's most notorious crime cases.[1]

Events

On the night of 7 March 1932, Swedish politician Hjalmar von Sydow, his cook Karoline Herou, and his maid Ebba Hamn were all found dead at von Sydow's home at Norr Mälarstrand in Stockholm.[2][3] All three had been beaten to death.[1] The bodies of von Sydow and Herou were found in Herou's room, whereas Hamn lay dead in von Sydow's room.[1] From the beginning, the murder weapon was presumed to be an iron pipe, bought the day before the murders by von Sydow's son Fredrik von Sydow, but it was determined later that a flatiron that was missing after the murders was the actual murder weapon.[2]

The bodies had been discovered by a young girl, the niece of von Sydow's late wife, who lived at the home. Her account led the police to issue a warrant for Fredrik von Sydow and his wife Ingun as main suspects of the case. Immediately after the murders, the pair had traveled by taxi to meet competitive shooter Sven O. Hallman, a friend of Fredrik's, borrowing a gun from him.[1] Afterwards, the pair had gone to the Tegner restaurant in Stockholm, then visited a men's clothing store, a pharmacy, yet another restaurant called Vallonen,[2] and the Gillet restaurant in Uppsala, where they arrived at about eight at night. They had dinner plans with friends and while the dinner was in progress, Fredrik first shot his wife and then shot himself in the head.[4][5]

Motive

The motive for the murders remains unclear, but one possible scenario is that Fredrik was a drug user and had fallen into serious financial difficulties. Fredrik's relationship with his father was strained. All of these factors could have resulted in a desperate impulse to murder.[1] According to the police, Fredrik had taken his father's wallet which contained SEK 235 (equivalent to SEK 7000 today) at the time of the murders.[2][6][7]

Murders in literature, theater and film

Hotell Gillet in Uppsala today

Sigfrid Siwertz's play Ett brott was inspired by the murders and had its premiere on 13 October 1933 at the Lorensteatern in Gothenburg. It was also performed at Dramatiska teatern in Stockholm on 15 March 1934 and was directed by Alf Sjöberg. The play also resulted in a film in 1940 with actors Edvin Adolphson and Karin Ekelund playing the lead roles.[1]

A television film about the murders, Ett skuggspel, directed by Ingvar Skogsberg, was broadcast on SVT in 1985. The lead roles were played by Stefan Ekman and Jessica Zandén.

In 2004, author Helena Henschen published her book I skuggan av ett brott that covered the murders.[8] In 2006, the Uppsala stadsteater presented a play about the event with the title von Sydowmordens gåta. An interview in connection with the play was made with Fredrik and Ingun's living daughter about how the murders affected her life.[9]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kleberg, Madeleine; Pollack, Ester. "Media stories: murder, motives and moralities" (PDF). Stockholm University.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Frigell, Anders (2002). von Sydowmordens gåta (in Swedish) (1st ed.). Uppsala: Uppsala Publ. House. ISBN 91-7005-237-9.
  3. Ahrenberg, Sixten; Bernhardsson, Carl Olof (1951). Polisen lägger pussel (in Swedish). Stockholm.
  4. Rune, David (13 May 2012). "Monica och de von Sydowska morden". P4 Dokumentär (in Swedish). Sveriges Radio. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  5. Mälarstedt, Kurt (2004-08-06). "Morden har präglat hennes liv". Dagens Nyheter (in Swedish). Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  6. Henschen, Helena (2004). I skuggan av ett brott (in Swedish). Stockholm: Bromberg. ISBN 91-7608-994-0.
  7. "Prisomräknaren – räkna på inflationen" (in Swedish). Statistics Sweden. Archived from the original on 12 December 2011.
  8. LIBRIS post 9499878
  9. Thunberg, Karin (19 November 2006). "Ett barns börda". Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). Retrieved 1 November 2014.
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