Drost, the Danish name of a supreme state official who in Medieval Scandinavia was the leading man of the government. Scandinavia, Fennoscandia, and the Kola Peninsula. ...
The word that seems to be of German origin (Truchsess) means a butler or a leader of the household but during the Scandinavian Early Middle Age it developed into a powerful political position. The drost acted as a kind of a ”prime minister” who was the king’s substitute and at least officially havde leadership of other officials. Less powerful drosts often went into the background in favour of the chancellors. The office seems to have appeared in Denmark in the 1200s and a bit later in Sweden and Norway. In was not quite unusual that also minor (or local) princes like Dukes had their own drost. A prime minister may be either: chief or leading member of the cabinet of the top-level government in a country having a parliamentary system of government; or the official, in countries with a semi-presidential system of government, appointed to manage the civil service and execute the directives of... Chancellor (Latin: cancellarius), an official title used by most of the peoples whose civilization has arisen directly or indirectly out of the Roman empire. ...
In all three countries the post was abolished in the 1380s. In Denmark it was replaced by the Steward of the Realm. In Sweden it was revived in the 1400s and in the 1600s in a new version (riksdrost) ”drost of the Realm” which was also used in Denmark for a short while after 1660.
In North Western Germany the word “land drost” was used about noble district caretakers until the 1800s.
Willem Drost (1633 - 1659) was a Dutch Baroque painter and printmaker.
Both Drost’s and Rembrandt’s masterpieces were acquired by the Louvre in Paris.
Drost had evolved into one of Rembrandt's most talented disciples, so much so that his 1654 painting titled: Portrait of a Young Woman with her Hands Folded on a Book was one of the ones attributed to Rembrandt for more than 300 years.