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  1. Canute VI was the king of Denmark (coregent, 1170–82; king, 1182–1202), during whose reign Denmark withdrew from the Holy Roman Empire and extended its dominion along the southern Baltic coast to Pomerania, Mecklenburg, and Holstein.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Canute of Denmark. Canute of Denmark - Danish: Knud - may refer to: Six kings of Denmark. Harthacnut I of Denmark or Canute I the Hardy, legendary King of Denmark (916/17–934) Cnut the Great, Canute II the Great, (985/95–1035), King of Denmark (1018–1035), Norway and England. Harthacnut, Canute III the Hardy, (1020–1042), King of ...

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  4. Canute VI of Denmark. Categories: 12th-century kings of Denmark. 13th-century kings of Denmark. 13th-century monarchs of Denmark. House of Estridsen. Hidden category: Wikipedia categories named after Danish monarchs.

  5. Canute IV. Canute IV ( c. 1042 – 10 July 1086), later known as Canute the Holy ( Danish: Knud IV den Hellige) or Saint Canute ( Sankt Knud ), was King of Denmark from 1080 until 1086. Canute was an ambitious king who sought to strengthen the Danish monarchy, devotedly supported the Roman Catholic Church, and had designs on the English throne.

  6. Canute VI of Denmark (1163-12 November 1202) was King of Denmark from 12 May 1182 to 12 November 1202, succeeding Valdemar the Great and preceding Valdemar the Conqueror. Canute was born in Denmark in 1163, the eldest son of King Valdemar the Great and the older brother of Valdemar the Conqueror. He became King of Denmark in 1182 and crushed a peasant revolt in Scania, and, in 1184, he refused ...

  7. Canute VI (Danish: Knud Valdemarsøn; c. 1163 – 12 November 1202) was King of Denmark (1182–1202). Read more on Wikipedia. Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Canute VI of Denmark has received more than 121,136 page views.

  8. canute vi. (1163-1202), king of Denmark, eldest son of Valdemar was crowned in his seventh year (1170), as his father's co-regent, so as to secure the succession. In 1182 he succeeded to the throne.

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