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  2. Magnus the Strong (c. 1106 – 4 June 1134), also known as Magnus Nilsson (Danish: Magnus Nielsen/Nielssøn), was a Danish duke who ruled Gothenland in southern Sweden from the 1120s to c. 1132. It is disputed whether he was elected king by the Swedes, but he is nevertheless sometimes found in the modern list of Swedish monarchs as Magnus I . [4]

    • Magnus I

      Magnus I may refer to: Magnus the Good (1024–1047), King of...

  3. 1290. Title / Office: king (1275-1290), Sweden. Magnus I (died 1290) was the king of Sweden (1275–90) who helped introduce a feudal class society into Sweden. The second eldest son of Birger Jarl ( q.v. ), he married a German princess and thereby came into contact with continental forms of lordship.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Aug 1, 2023 · Magnus Nilsson, Mogens Nielsen, or Magnus the Strong (born c. 1106 – died June 4, 1134 in the battle of Fotevik), was a Scandinavian ruler and Danish duke who reigned c. 1125-c.1130 in southern parts of Sweden ("Gothenland"). His father was king Niels I of Denmark and mother Margaret Fredkulla, the second or eldest daughter of Inge I of Sweden.

    • 1106
    • Roskilde, Sjælland, Danmark (Denmark)
  5. Magnus I (1107-1134), in Swedish Magnus Nilsson, was a Danish prince who became King of Sweden in the late 1120's and was deposed around 1130. Magnus I of Sweden. King of Sweden. Upload media. Wikipedia. Date of birth. c. 1106 (statement with Gregorian date earlier than 1584) Date of death.

  6. Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Magnus I of Sweden has received more than 83,454 page views. His biography is available in 33 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 32 in 2019).

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