väliskattekihte
Väliskattekihte is a historical Swedish administrative title that referred to a mid-level tax officer responsible for overseeing the collection and reporting of local taxes within the kingdom. The word is a compound of välisk (intermediate) and kattekihte (tax clerk). The position emerged in the early 18th century during the reign of King Charles XII as part of a broader effort to centralize fiscal administration and reduce corruption in rural tax collection. Väliskattekihte were usually appointed by the county governor and were subordinate to diocesan treasurers but held more direct contact with peasant taxpayers than the lower-level hemmadkådda (“home tax collector”)
Typical duties of a väliskattekihte included auditing local land records, verifying tax assessments based on the
The office gradually fell out of use during the 19th‑century reforms that established a modern civil service