Niklaus Leuenberger (born c. 1611—died Sept. 6, 1653, Schönholz bei Rüderswil, Bern) was a Swiss peasant hero, spokesman for rural discontent, and leader of the peasant revolt at Bern (1653), for which he earned the sobriquet King of the Peasants.
By the mid-17th century, Swiss peasants had come to bitterly resent the domination of the towns and to openly complain of oppressive taxation and the infringement of local rights. In 1653 the leadership of a movement expressing this unrest fell to Leuenberger. A rustic of origins as obscure as most of his fellows, he had as his primary claims to leadership a measure of literacy and native intelligence. Having acquired some local prominence in the district of Trachselwald (canton of Bern), he was appointed head of the movement at an intercantonal peasant assembly at Sumiswald (April 23, 1653). Although he was opposed to violent methods, Leuenberger led a peasant force of 16,000 against Bern (May 1653), where he secured a number of concessions to local grievances. Federal forces soon intervened, however, and, after the peasants’ defeat at Herzogenbuchsee (June 8, 1653), the movement collapsed. Leuenberger was arrested June 12 and was executed at Bern.