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  1. 1 day ago · Junior King of Denmark r. 1321–1326, r. 1329–1332: Valdemar IV Atterdag c. 1320 –1375 King of Denmark r. 1340–1375: Helvig of Schleswig d. 1374: Otto c. 1310 –after 1346 Duke of Lolland and Estonia: Margaret of Denmark 1305–1340: Catherine of Anhalt-Bernburg c. 1330 –1390: Valdemar III 1314–1364 King of Denmark r. 1326–1329 ...

  2. 1 day ago · In 1165 King Valdemar I (r. 1157-82) broke with this tradition. During a campaign to Rügen, he had his three-year old son Cnut VI elected as co-king. A practice that had not been seen in Denmark since the age of Cnut the Great. The election was, in practice, a breach with the elective monarchy.

  3. May 6, 2024 · Through marriage with a descendant of King Valdemar I of Sweden and of King Eric IV of Denmark, a claim to Sweden and Denmark was staked as early as 1350. At that time, its competitors were the successors of Margaret I of Denmark.

    • Friedrich Ferdinand, Prince of Schleswig-Holstein
    • (adoptive:)Bernadotte
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  5. May 5, 2024 · King Christian IX, together with Queen Louise, had six children: Frederick, Alexandra, George, Dagmar, Thyra, and Valdemar. [3] Because of strained finances and limited fortunes that Christian and Louise had before 1852, they were actively involved in the education of Dagmar and her siblings during that time. [7]

  6. • 12 min. ago. Tagostino62. Valdemar Atterdag Holding Visby to Ransom, 1361, Carl Gustaf Hellqvist (1851–1890). In 1361, Gotland was conquered by Valdemar IV of Denmark. 1,800 Gotlanders were killed in battle in front of the city.

  7. Apr 30, 2024 · King Frederik II’s (1534–1588) badge is the oldest known in existence. Only in 1693, after Christian V reduced the Order to a single class of thirty noble knights, himself, and his sons, did the insignia attain the appearance we know now, with its five large, table-cut diamonds laid to form a cross.

  8. Apr 18, 2024 · Christian IV (born April 12, 1577, Frederiksborg Castle, Hillerød, Den.—died Feb. 28, 1648, Copenhagen) was the king of Denmark and Norway (1588–1648), who led two unsuccessful wars against Sweden and brought disaster upon his country by leading it into the Thirty Years’ War.

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