Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Knut Haakonsson (Knut Håkonsson, Old Norse Knútr Hákonarson) (c. 1208–1261) was a Norwegian nobleman and claimant to the throne during the Civil war era in Norway.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Haakon_IVHaakon IV - Wikipedia

    Sigurd died in 1226, and the revolt was finally quashed in 1227 with the surrender of its last leader, Haakon the Crazy's son Knut Haakonsson. This left Haakon more or less uncontested monarch. [18]

    • June 1217 – 16 December 1263
    • Inge II
  3. king (1217-1263), Norway. Haakon IV Haakonsson (born 1204, Norway—died December 1263, Orkney Islands) was the king of Norway (1217–63) who consolidated the power of the monarchy, patronized the arts, and established Norwegian sovereignty over Greenland and Iceland. His reign is considered the beginning of the “golden age” (1217–1319 ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. People also ask

  5. Skule's other son-in-law, the one-time claimant Knut Håkonsson, did not join the revolt, but remained loyal to king Håkon. This rebellion is generally taken to mark the end of Norway's age of civil wars. Later reign. From this time onward Håkons reign was marked by internal peace and more prosperity than Norway had known for many years.

  6. Mar 22, 2024 · Birthdate: June 1204. Birthplace: Folkenborg (Folkisberg), Eidsberg, Østfold, Norge (Norway) Death: December 16, 1263 (59) Kirkjuvágr (nå Kirkwall), Kirkwall, Orkney Islands, Norway (later Scotland, UK) Place of Burial: Bergen, Hordaland, Norway.

    • Østfold
    • "Håkon den Gamle", "Haco", "Haquinus"
    • Frille Kanga "The Young" "Den Unge
    • June 1204
  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KrampusKrampus - Wikipedia

    The Krampus is an old Christian character [citation needed] from old world Catholic Christmas traditions [citation needed]. The Krampus is one of the variations of St Nicholas’s helpers; a tradition where another character is assigned St Nicholas’s naughty list duties. The Krampus is a horned anthropomorphic goat figure with one human foot ...

  8. Das anglo-skandinavische Reich Knuts des Großen (1014–1035) Englische Earldoms um 1025. Im Jahr 1013 nahm er an der Invasion Englands durch seinen Vater Sven teil und wurde von diesem als Befehlshaber der Flotte in Gainsborough zurückgelassen. Als Sven Anfang 1014 starb, wurde Knut dessen Nachfolger in England.

  1. People also search for