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  1. Mar 25, 2024 · 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. A statute that he issued at Alsnö in 1279 created a lay upper class, the frälse, who, in ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Magnus_IMagnus I - Wikipedia

    Magnus I. Magnus I may refer to: Magnus the Good (1024–1047), King of Norway and King of Denmark. Magnus Erlendsson, Earl of Orkney (ruled from 1108 to about 1115) Magnus the Strong, King of Sweden (c. 1106–1134) Magnus III of Sweden, King of Sweden (1240–1290) Magnus, Duke of Saxony (c. 1045–1106) Magnus I, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg from ...

  3. Aug 1, 2023 · About Magnus I "The strong" Nilsson, king of Sweden. 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 ...

    • Roskilde, Sjælland
    • Roskilde, Sjælland, Danmark (Denmark)
    • 1106
  4. Magnus was born in Norway either in April or May 1316 to Eric, Duke of Södermanland, a son of Magnus III of Sweden and Ingeborg, a daughter of Haakon V of Norway. Magnus was elected king of Sweden on 8 July 1319, and acclaimed as hereditary king of Norway at the thing of the Haugating in Tønsberg in August of the same year.

  5. Mar 25, 2024 · king (1035-1047), Norway. Magnus I Olafsson (born 1024, Norway—died Oct. 25, 1047, Skibby, Den.) was a Norwegian ruler, king of Norway (1035–47) and Denmark (1042–47), who wrested hegemony in the two Scandinavian nations from descendants of Canute the Great, king of Denmark and England. An illegitimate son of the Norwegian king Olaf II ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
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  7. Magnus I "the Strong" of Sweden (1107-4 June 1134) was King of Sweden from 6 June 1126 to 4 June 1134, succeeding Ragnvald Knaphovde and preceding Sverker I of Sweden. Magnus was born in 1107, the son of King Niels of Denmark and Margaret Fredkulla (the daughter of King Inge the Elder of Sweden). When Margaret's cousin Inge the Younger died in 1125, the Geats named Magnus king, breaching the ...

  8. Magnus I of Sweden. Magnus the Strong (Swedish: Magnus Nilsson; Danish: Magnus Nielsen; c. 1106 – 4 June 1134, at the Battle of Fotevik) 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 ...

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