Early Swedish history

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History of Sweden

The Swedish pre-history ended around 800 CE, when the Viking Age began. The Viking Age lasted to the midth 11th century, when the Christianization broke through. Circa 1050 to 1350 – when the Black Death struck – is considered to be Older Middle Ages. Between 1350 and 1523 – when king Gustav Vasa was crowned – is considered the Younger Middle Ages.[1]

During this period, Sweden was gradually consolidated. Scandinavia was fully Christianized around 1100 AD. The Kalmar Union between the Scandinavian countries was established in 1389 and lasted until Gustav Vasa broke off at seizing power.

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[edit] Viking Age

Around 800, the Scandinavian people had settled in villages and established small societies based on petty kingdoms and their kings, mainly known from legends. The Scandinavian people now became more distinguished as separate people, and started going out on expedition to foreign countries, that lead them to accumulate some wealth. Nation borders were lain inside the country, because the seas were more easy to travel than the forests in the inland, which is why some southern and northern territories were either unexplored or belonged to other kingdoms up until the 17th century.[2]

It is also around 800 that the earliest concrete influences from foreign countries are to be found, including early contact with Christianity and a development of the runic alphabet.

[edit] Voyages to foreign countries

Viking expeditions (blue); the expeditions going into Russia were Swedish Vikings
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Viking expeditions (blue); the expeditions going into Russia were Swedish Vikings

The Danish and Norwegian vikings turned their attention to western countries, England, France and the Atlantic. The vikings of Sweden, however, traveled east into Russia. The large Russian mainland and its many navigable rivers offered good prospects for merchandice and, at times, plundering.

During the 9th century extensive Scandinavian settlements were made on the east side of the Baltic sea. The Russian Tale of Bygone Years (dated to 1113) writes about how the tribe Varangians arrived in Constantinople, and of piratical expeditions on the Black Sea and on the Caspian Sea. The legendary expeditions by Rurik (Rørik) and Askold (Haskuld) established settlements that resulted in Kievan Rus', a predecessor state of Belarus, Russia and Ukraine.

The Varangians accumulated some wealth from its foreigh trades. A centre of trade in northern Europe developed on the island Birka, not far from where Stockholm was later constructed, in midth Sweden. Birka was probably demolished already during the 11th century, but remains show its wealth in the 9th and 10th century. Thousands of graves, coins, jewelry and other luxury items have been found there. [3]

There are also other locations in Sweden where precious treasures have been found, revealing a widespread trade between Sweden and eastern countries down to Asia.

[edit] Early rulers

Medieval Danish, Norwegian, Icelandic and Anglo-Saxon sources tell of Migration Age Swedish kings belonging to the Scylfing dynasty, also known as Ynglings. Some sources, such as Íslendingabók, Ynglinga saga and Historia Norwegiæ trace the foundation of the Swedish kingdom back in the last centuries BC[4].

Some of these sources, the Anglo-Saxon Widsith and Beowulf, may date to the 8th century in their present forms, but retain oral traditions that are considerably older. Native Scandinavian sources are generally held to date no earlier than the 9th century in the form of skaldic poetry, such as Ynglingatal. As the Scandinavian sources were not put to paper until the 11th century, and later, their historic validity is controversial.

Consequently, historians can differ in the value they ascribe to the sources, in different contexts[5]. Historians also vary in how they define Sweden, some distinguishing between Sverige (the modern Swedish name for Sweden) and Svea rike (the medieval form of the Swedish name for Sweden) as two different nations.

Many kings only ruled over parts of the present territory of Sweden (See further Semi-legendary kings of Sweden)[6], and so their validity as kings of Sweden may be questioned.

The first undisputed king of Sweden was Eric the Victorious, who lived around 970–994. He was succeeded by King Olof (late 960s – circa 1020), the first Christian king of Sweden.

[edit] Christianization

Swedes had contact with Christianity from their early travels. Christian influence on burials can be traced to the late 8th century in some parts of Sweden. Additionally, Irish missionary monks were probably active in some parts of Sweden, as demonstrated by Irish saints that were worshipped in the Middle ages.

The earliest campain to introduce Christianity in Sweden were made by the monk Ansgar (801–865). Ansgar made his first visit to Birka in 829, was granted permission to build a church, and stayed as a missionary until 831. He then returned home and became Archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen. Around 850, he returned to Birka, where he saw that the previous congregation had been shattered. Ansgar tried to reestablish it, but it lasted but a few years. In the remainder of the 9th and most of the 10th century, there were only a few futile attempts of Christianization, which did not result in anything lasting. [7]

When Emund the Old ascended to the throne, around 1050, he had converted to Christianity. But because of his quarrelles with Adalhard, Archbishop of Bremen, independence of the Church of Sweden was not obtained for another century. A decade later, in 1060, King Stenkil ascended to the throne. At the time, Christianity was firmly established throughout most of Sweden, with its chief strength in Västergötland. However, the people of Uppland, with their center in Uppsala, still held out the heathen faith. Adalhard had succeeded in destroying the idols in Västergötland, but was yet unable to persuade Stenkil to destroy the heathen Temple of Uppsala.

There is still much to be known about the earliest Swedish regents and their values. However, the last pagan king was clearly Blot-Sweyn, who reign 1084–1087. According to legend, Blot-Sweyn became king when his predecessor King Inge refused to sacrifised at Uppsala. His brother-in-law Sweyn stepped up and agreed to sacrifice, which gave him the pet name Blot, which means sacrifice. Inge got revenge three years later, when he entered Uppsala with a great force, set the template ablaze, and killed Sweyn as he attempted to flee.[8][9]

It wasn't until Eric the Saint (1150-1160) that the Church of Sweden was to be organized on the model prevalent elsewhere. According to legend, Erik also undertook it upon himself to preach the Gospel eastwards. His travels, not unjustifiedly described as a crusade, to the heathen Finns in Österland marked the beginning of Sweden's overseas endeavors east of the Gulf of Bothnia.

After the introduction of Christianity the importance of Uppsala began steadily to decline, and the kings no longer made it their residence. It was made the seat for the Swedish Archbishop in 1164. A cathedral was built on the place for the heathen Temple of Uppsala. One of the first to be consecrated there was the Swedish King Eric the Saint.

[edit] Consolidation

Map of Sweden 1219 (purple)
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Map of Sweden 1219 (purple)

In the 11th and 12th centuries, the sources state how Sweden more or less consisted of self-governing provinces. It is established that Olof Skötkonung was king of Svealand, but it is uncertain whether his realm extended to include all of Götaland. And after Olof, the reign of the country was on several occasions divided between different rules. King Sverker I of Sweden (1134-1155) is said to have permanently integrated Götaland with Svealand. [10]

The following centuries saw rivalry between two houses: the House of Sverker in the Östergötland province, and the House of Eric in the Uppland province.


[edit] 13th century

The greatest medieval statesman of Sweden, and one of the principal architects of its rise as a nation, was Birger Jarl the Regent, who practically ruled the land from 1248 to 1266. He is today revered as the founder of Stockholm and as the creator of national legislations. His wise reforms prepared the way for the abolition of serfdom. The increased respect - and power - which later royals owe to Birger Jarl was still further extended by his son, King Magnus Ladulås (1275-1290). Both these rulers, by the institution of separate and almost independent duchies, attempted to introduce into Sweden a feudal system similar to that already established elsewhere in Europe; the danger of thus weakening the realm by partition was averted, though not without violent and tragic complications by the opponents, the Folkung party. (Unfortunately, the term Folkung also later referred to Earl Birger's descendants, forming the royal Folkunge of Bjelbo dynasty.) Finally, in 1319, the severed portions of Sweden were once more reunited.

The formation of separate orders (classes of society), or estates, was promoted by Magnus Ladulås, who extended the privileges of the clergy and practically founded the formal Swedish nobility (see Ordinance of Alsnö, 1280). In connection with this institution we now hear of a heavily armed cavalry as the kernel of the national army. The Knights (new nobles) and Burghers became distinguishable from the higher nobility. To this period belongs the rise of a prominent burgess class, as the towns now began to acquire charters. At the end of the 13th century, and the beginning of the 14th, provincial codes of laws appear and the king and his council executed also legislative and judicial functions.

[edit] Union between Sweden and Norway

The first union between Sweden and Norway occurred in 1319 when the three-year-old Magnus, son of the Swedish royal Duke Eric and of the Norwegian princess Ingeborg, inherited the throne of Norway from his grandfather Haakon V and in the same year was elected King of Sweden, by the Convention of Oslo. The boy king's long minority weakened the royal influence in both countries, and Magnus lost both his kingdoms before his death. The Swedes, irritated by his misrule, superseded him by his nephew, Albert of Mecklenburg in 1365. In Sweden, Magnus partialities and necessities led directly to the rise of a powerful landed aristocracy, and, indirectly, to the growth of popular liberties. Forced by the unruliness of the magnates to lean upon the middle classes, in 1359 the king summoned the first Swedish Riksdag, on which occasion representatives from the towns were invited to appear along with the nobles and clergy. His successor, Albert, was forced to go a step farther and, in 1371, to take the first coronation oath.

[edit] Kalmar Union

See also: Kalmar Union

In 1388, at the request of the Swedes themselves, Albert was driven out by Queen Margaret of Denmark and at a convention of the representatives of the three Scandinavian kingdoms (held at Kalmar in 1397), Margaret's great-nephew, Eric of Pomerania, was elected the common king, although the liberties of each of the three realms were expressly reserved and confirmed. The union was to be a personal, not a political union. Neither Margaret herself nor her successors observed the stipulation that in each of the three kingdoms only natives should hold land and high office, and the efforts first of Denmark (at that time by far the strongest member of the union) to impose her will on the Union's weaker kingdoms soon produced a rupture, or rather a series of semi-ruptures. The Swedes first broke away from it in 1434 under the popular leader Engelbrekt Engelbrektsson, and after his murder they elected Karl Knutsson Bonde their king under the title of Charles VIII, 1436. In 1441 Charles VIII had to abdicate in favour of Christopher of Bavaria, who was already king of Denmark and Norway; however, upon the death of Christopher in 1448, a state of confusion ensued in the course of which Charles VIII was twice reinstated and twice expelled again. Finally, on his death in 1470, the three kingdoms were reunited under Christian II of Denmark, the prelates and higher nobility of Sweden being favourable to the union.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ The classification and dates are found in Harrison (2002), pp.12-14, and Weibull (1997).
  2. ^ Andersson (1975), pp.29-30
  3. ^ Andersson (1975), p.34
  4. ^ One of the earliest kings, Fjölnir was considered to have lived at the time of the Roman emperor Augustus, see Grottasöngr.
  5. ^ The Hervarar saga for instance is still of value to Swedish historians in its end sections, although most of it is considered to be of legendary nature.
  6. ^ Harrison, pp.16-19
  7. ^ Andersson (1975), p.40-41
  8. ^ One early source is the Hervarar saga from the 13th century.
  9. ^ Another important primary source is found in the legend of Saint Eskil, written a few centuries later.
  10. ^ Weibull (1997), p.18